Kermit 95 (K95) is a multipurpose communication software package for Windows. It can make serial-port connections, modem connections, and Internet and other types of network connections, all in a ...
Each of the mark-mode actions -- copy to clipboard, copy to host, copy to file -- has a Kverb (keyboard verb) associated with it. Marking and copying can be done entirely with keystrokes and no mouse, ...
This page is written for users of Unix operating systems -- Linux, Mac OS X, FreeBSD, AIX, HP-UX, IRIX, Solaris, etc. The Kermit FTP client is also available in Kermit 95 2.0 for Windows 9x/ME/NT/2000 ...
Kermit books and manuals were published in English and several other languages between 1987 and 1997. This page features the final editions of each of the English-language books, which, although out ...
Internet Kermit Service (IKS) is an Internet standard file transfer and management service defined in RFC2839 and RFC2840. It's similar to an FTP server except: It uses Kermit protocol instead of FTP ...
Teletype ad 1960s The Teletype machines from the Teletype Corporation, Skokie, Illinois, were ubiquitous at non-IBM computing installations in the 1960s and 70s. Notably, they were often supplied with ...
The uncompressed unarchived files are not available via HTTP because HTTP, the protocol of the Web, doesn't have a way to refer to or deal with a group of files, like FTP can do with its MGET command.
Windows NT (which actually predates Windows 95 by a couple years, but did not become popular until much later) solves many of the same problems addressed by K95 Host Mode: a file system supporting ...
IKSD for Unix Unix refers to the operating system family that includes Linux, FreeBSD, OpenBSD, NetBSD, Mac OS X, Solaris, AIX, HP-UX, IRIX, QNX, etc. The Internet Kermit Serviced Daemon for Unix is C ...
On 23 July 2021, all 678 FTP links on this page were converted HTTP links. No other changes (aside from this notice) were made. Spot checking shows that some of the binaries have disappeared. If you ...
In April and May of 2021, the major Web browsers dropped support for FTP links (traditionally used for downloading files from Web sites); thus thousands of links at this site ceased to function. Work ...