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trouleft a comment
Hey fren, I'm the maker behind Gumpbox, a native macOS app that connects AI agents to your Linux servers. Stop typing commands. Just tell Claude or ChatGPT what to do. Deploy apps, restart services, check server health - all through conversation. AI agents execute everything through Gumpbox's built-in MCP (Model Context Protocol) server running locally on your Mac. 🤖 AI-Powered Server...

GumpboxAI-compatible Linux server management for macOS
AI-compatible Linux server management app for macOS. Control your infrastructure through AI agents with integrated MCP server, or use traditional tools. Native Mac app with multitab terminals, real-time monitoring, SSH tunneling, and system administration.

GumpboxAI-compatible Linux server management for macOS
trouleft a comment
Show case the premium UI/UX of Gumpbox :D

GumpboxBeautiful native macos app for joyful vps management
trouleft a comment
👋 Hey Product Hunt! I'm the maker behind Gumpbox, a native MacOS app that's here to rescue you from the chaos of VPS management. Server management tools feel stuck in the 80s. I wanted something that respects your time, your workflow, and your Mac. 🚨 WHY I BUILT THIS 🕳️ SSH Tunneling Hell Ever tried debugging a production database? You need to: - Remember the tunnel command syntax (ssh -L...

GumpboxBeautiful native macos app for joyful vps management
Experience the joy of server management with Gumpbox. Manage unlimited VPS with elegant multitab terminals, intuitive file browser, secure tunneling, and real-time monitoring. Professional-grade features wrapped in the beautiful interface Mac users love.

GumpboxBeautiful native macos app for joyful vps management
troustarted a discussion
Why I built Gumpbox: SSH tunneling & command management that doesn't suck
Hey Product Hunt! 👋 I'm excited to share Gumpbox - a native macOS app that finally makes VPS management feel like a Mac app should. The Real Pain: Two things drove me to build this: 1. SSH Tunneling Hell 🔥 Ever tried debugging a production database? You need to: - Remember the tunnel command syntax (ssh -L 3306:localhost:3306... wait, which port was local again?) - Keep the terminal window open...
