![]() You’ll be able to use standard light or dark themes but also customize text colors, fonts, sizes and more, along with a background image if you choose. ![]() You’ll see that there are currently three different groups of settings you can modify: Appearance, Keyboard & mouse, and Behavior. Once you’ve noodled around, you’ll want to disable the flag setting and restart your browser again for the current, working Terminal app. This is strictly a preview to show you what options you’ll be able to customize. Note that while your Terminal will now have a three dot menu option at the top right which gets you into the options, this Terminal app does not work at this time. ![]() That work is still going on but if you’re curious to see all of the upcoming, new options in the Terminal, you can actually preview them now in the Chrome OS 81 Stable Channel.Īll it takes is one experimental flag setting at chrome://flags#terminal-system-app: Enable this flag and restart your browser. Back in September, I noted that the Chrome OS team was working on improving the Linux Terminal for Crostini users, including customization options and multiple Terminal tabs.
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