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Horizon 0.2.4, published by Peter Rekkal Khan-Sunde, is a GPU-accelerated terminal board that renders an infinite canvas on which users can place, scale, and rearrange an unlimited number of terminal sessions as independent, resizable panels. Designed for developers, DevOps engineers, and system administrators who routinely juggle dozens of SSH connections, log streams, and build monitors, the application treats every terminal as a movable object that persists across reboots and can be snap-shot into named workspace presets. Remote hosts are stored as first-class entities, so jumping from a local build pane to a cloud instance requires only a click, while the underlying GPU renderer keeps scrolling smooth even when hundreds of thousands of lines fly by. Session state is continually serialized, letting users shut the laptop on Friday and reopen Monday to the exact same canvas, complete with scrollback, running processes, and pane geometry. Horizon also exposes a message protocol that automation agents can use to open, close, or script terminals without human interaction, making it equally suited for interactive troubleshooting and headless CI dashboards. Since its initial release three versions have appeared, each tightening performance and adding finer-grained workspace controls. The program sits in the System Utilities / Terminal Emulators category and is distributed as a lightweight native binary for Windows. Horizon is available for free on get.nero.com, with downloads provided via trusted Windows package sources such as winget, always delivering the latest version and supporting batch installation of multiple applications.
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