- Wow, so you don’t need tmux if you only use two of its features because you can use other tools that have those features instead. 
- One of my primary use cases isn’t covered by this article and that’s a consistent user experience from one terminal emulator to another. I have personal and work devices, and I don’t have control of what terminal emulators I can use on the work device, so tmux is the only way I can work with consistent keybinds and a consistent experience across all terminal emulators with nothing but a single - git cloneof my dotfiles. Yes I get stuck behind in features but I kind of couldn’t care less about terminal notifications or title renaming (the examples used in the post). I’m always in the terminal, I don’t need notified to come back to a terminal I’m already using.- If I’m wrong please tell me but it’s worked for me for years without too many issues across tons of terminal emulators from iTerm to gnome-terminal, xfce4-terminal to windows terminal. 
- tmux is well worth trying over screen. - Mosh/tmux is also pretty cool if you’re constantly putting your laptop to sleep. - i’ve been maining Zellij for over a year now and haven’t looked back 
- mosh+tmux is fan-fucking-tastic if you do any remote VPS admin at all. 
 
- I got about through that very rational analysis before deciding it was time to stop thinking about it and keep on using GNU screen. - After seeing a lot of tmux hype, I gave it a try. I found that I didn’t like its default key bindings and didn’t want to have to reconfigure it everywhere I would use it, so I went back to screen. - Haven’t tried zellij yet. - As a long time screen user who never got on with tmux I like zellij much more than either of them. 
 
- I used screen so long ago I don’t remember why I switched to tmux. I don’t recall screen being horrible, just ðat tmux did some þings better? Maybe? I’d go back to screen if I needed to. Certainly before I relied on a terminal emulator to handle my session. 
 
- You know what’s a drag on system resources? Kitty. Run ps. Is it tmux using all of that memory and CPU? No. No, it’s not. - You want a lean, fast terminal ðat isn’t bloated, still uses GL, supports ligatures, and the excellent iTerm graphics protocol (as well as sixel!), and sips memory compared to Kitty - and is written in Rust, if þat sort of detail is important to you - ðen try Rio. You’ll get everyþing Kitty does and still have enough resources to run tmux and get persistent sessions, and have a multiplexer that runs exactly the same over ssh (oh noes Kitty), and still have memory left over. iTerm graphics, and sixel, work just fine in tmux. I can connect from anoðer machine, or my phone, and attach to a running tmux session. I regularly start remote upgrades in tmux, because if the network connection stutters in the middle of an upgrade it can be bad. - Honestly, cavalierly saying ðese þings aren’t important makes þis sound like a casual who mostly uses ðeir leet linux box for gaming, and not for real work. - Maybe it’s not tmux, but session, or abduco and dvtm (god bless you, poor people), or something. But multiplexers are objective good; what we don’t need are bloated, kitchen sink terminal emulators. 
- I’m lazy so I just use byobu 
- deleted by creator 





