While your terminal emulator of choice depends a lot on personal preference, it's quite clear that the most powerful terminal emulator on Linux is the feature-filled Terminator.
- Provides a fully-functional command line interface (CLI) for Linux
- Arrange terminals in a grid
- Open multiple sessions in tabs
- Drag and drop re-ordering of terminals
- Lots of configurable keyboard shortcuts
- Save multiple layouts and profiles in the preferences
- Simultaneous typing to arbitrary groups of terminals
- Customizable visual style
Terminator is a powerful, feature-filled terminal based on the GNOME Terminal many of you are used to. If you have to work with the terminal often (as most Linux users do), Terminator will make your life easier with not only tabs, but arranging those terminals in a grid, configure a ton of keyboard shortcuts, and more. You can even save custom layouts for later, so when you're running a few regular tasks, you can open up your custom grid with just a few keystrokes. It's a terminal like you've never used one before.
The only real downside to Terminator is that it isn't exactly lightweight. If you're trying to run a super light system (especially if it's on a low-powered machine), Terminator might not be the right terminal for you. The only other thing that could make Terminator really killer is if it included a Quake-style drop-down terminal, which can be so handy.
Linux users have a lot to choose from when it comes to terminal emulators. GNOME Terminal and Konsole (GNOME and KDE's default terminals, respectively) are both great terminals that should get the average user by with a number of preferences, shortcuts, and other features. If you only use your terminal on occasion, there's really no reason to switch away.
If you want something really lightweight, you'll definitely want to check out xterm or its even more lightweight, less configurable counterpart, rxvt. Neither gives you quite the feature set of the above terminal emulators, but they're perfect for low-powered systems where you don't need a ton of options.
Lastly, we love Quake-style dropdown terminals like Guake (for GNOME) and Yakuake (for KDE). In the style of the Quake video game, these terminals drop down from the top of your screen with a quick keystroke, hiding in the background until you need it. It's perfect for when you need a terminal quickly to just run a few commands?the convenience of having it at your constant beck and call is unparallelled.
Got a favorite terminal emulator we didn't mention? Share it with us in the comments.
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You can contact Whitson Gordon, the author of this post, at whitson@lifehacker.com. You can also find him on Twitter, Facebook, and lurking around our #tips page.
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Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/3rtkc3LT2Qk/the-best-terminal-emulator-for-linux
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