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  2. Qmodem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qmodem

    An independent free software re-implementation of Qmodem for Unix-like systems called Qodem [9] started development in 2003. Qodem is in active development and has features common to modern communications programs, such as Unicode display, and support for the telnet and ssh network protocols. [ 10 ]

  3. Terminal emulator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terminal_emulator

    Terminal emulators may implement local editing, also known as "line-at-a-time mode". This is also mistakenly referred to as "half-duplex". [citation needed] In this mode, the terminal emulator only sends complete lines of input to the host system. The user enters and edits a line, but it is held locally within the terminal emulator as it is ...

  4. Interface Message Processor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interface_Message_Processor

    The IMP was initially conceived as being connected to one host computer per site, but at the insistence of researchers and students from the host sites, each IMP was ultimately designed to connect to multiple host computers. The first IMP was delivered to Leonard Kleinrock's group at UCLA on August 30, 1969. It used an SDS Sigma 7 host computer.

  5. PuTTY - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PuTTY

    PuTTY user manual (copy from 2022) PuTTY (/ ˈ p ʌ t i /) [4] is a free and open-source terminal emulator, serial console and network file transfer application. It supports several network protocols, including SCP, SSH, Telnet, rlogin, and raw socket connection.

  6. Computer terminal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_terminal

    A block-oriented terminal or block mode terminal is a type of computer terminal that communicates with its host in blocks of data, as opposed to a character-oriented terminal that communicates with its host one character at a time. A block-oriented terminal may be card-oriented, display-oriented, keyboard-display, keyboard-printer, printer or ...

  7. In-circuit emulation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/In-circuit_emulation

    The system under test is under full control, allowing the developer to load, debug and test code directly. Most host systems are ordinary commercial computers unrelated to the CPU used for development. For example, a Linux PC might be used to develop software for a system using a Freescale 68HC11 chip, a processor that cannot run Linux.

  8. Windows Terminal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windows_Terminal

    Windows Terminal is a multi-tabbed terminal emulator developed by Microsoft for Windows 10 and later [4] as a replacement for Windows Console. [5] It can run any command-line app in a separate tab. It is preconfigured to run Command Prompt , PowerShell , WSL and Azure Cloud Shell Connector, [ 6 ] [ 7 ] and can also connect to SSH by manually ...

  9. Emulator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emulator

    In computing, an emulator is hardware or software that enables one computer system (called the host) to behave like another computer system (called the guest). An emulator typically enables the host system to run software or use peripheral devices designed for the guest system.