What’s the one alternative to wait you world switch in a heart beat
▲ 2 r/warpdotdev+3 crossposts

What’s the one alternative to wait you world switch in a heart beat

Trying to discover what it is that AI conversational terminal users want deep down

Been building my project similar to warp but I still can’t find that one singular thing most/a lot of
Your user prefers

Why do you prefer to talk to your terminal in English rather than using a basic terminal?

From all the complaints and compliments I’ve heard from here, there is a need for - more control and features that improve the quality of the process, clean /premium UI (so a better environment/place instead of the ugly raw style) to run your commands

People don’t want to be overwhelmed by updates and features (so, simplicity and a calm experience?)

Wanting lower pricing (that’s a warp issue not with the pro and cons with the AI as a terminal model)

I’ve attempted to own the calmer, safer, cheaper, better-looking, and simplified positioning and I’m realizing it’s the wrong way to go with it -check the app itself: https://www.verlox.app

I know why I prefer an AI terminal, I’m not great with syntax and commands, just haven’t had the time to learn them -but I use them as someone entering the dev world -while and side code will still tell me to do things on my own on terminals

Also, that x what the heck makes warp or any AI terminal not a “can’t Claude code/codex/cursor do this?

If someone would be interested in a chat with me either here or private I would be grateful -even better, if someone is willing to check out my app and give me honest feedback, I’ll make them a lifetime pro package

I know I prefer AI terminals but I’ve never been the type to build solo projects just for me —I need people to experience it with me and overall solve an issue/get a spot on the market

So again, why warp?, Why not PowerShell?, What would you personally say makes warp not another Claude code or cursor

What would you want or like about conservational terminals?

I would be waiting for any replies or just here so we can talk about the offer

u/tylerEsono — 2 days ago

Have an idea for a smart /agentic AI terminal

Where it operates and functions like a terminal but with extra UX functionalities, and overall better UI

you will finally hable to talk to your terminal like a real person

Removes the highly strike current terminals are, easy for vibe coders or new devs to use

And overall lest strike, removes the need to be highly cautious and operates better

For example , you could be like “install that file we talked about” and it installs it

Not a code editor -feel like I have to say this cause I’ve sick of hearing “can’t Claude/cursor do this?

I’m aware apps such as this already exist such as Warp

I’m convinced my positioning on this app and the current once are the same so I’m not really worried about them

reddit.com
u/tylerEsono — 1 month ago

For those of you writing nonfiction (essays, analysis, history, reported pieces, etc.) — what does your fact-checking process actually look like?

I find myself constantly tab-switching to verify dates, stats, names while I’m drafting, and it kills momentum. But when I try to leave it all to the end, I sometimes find a fact was wrong and have to rewrite a chunk around it. Curious if other people have a better system.

Also curious if any of you have had a published piece where a wrong fact got through and someone called it out — what happened?

(Context: I’ve been kicking around an idea for a tool that would live-check factual claims as you write and show sources in a sidebar. Wondering if this solves a real pain or if I’m projecting my own. Genuinely want to hear “this is a non-issue” if that’s the case.)

reddit.com
u/tylerEsono — 1 month ago

Curious how other people’s workflows look here.

When you’re drafting and you hit a claim you’re not 100% sure on a date, a stat, a name — do you stop and verify in the moment, or flag it and check everything at the end?

I’ve been talking to a few freelancers and the answers are all over the place. Some say tab-switching to Google mid-sentence destroys their flow. Others say batch-checking at the end means they sometimes have to rewrite paragraphs because a fact was off.

Also curious: have you ever published something with a wrong fact that slipped through? How did it happen?

(For context — I’m exploring an idea for a tool that would catch questionable factual claims live as you write and surface sources in a sidebar, so you don’t break flow but also don’t have to do a separate fact-check pass. Trying to figure out if this is a real pain or one I’m overthinking. Honest reactions welcome, including “this would annoy me.”)

reddit.com
u/tylerEsono — 1 month ago