Welcome to the Kermit Project,
Columbia University,
New York City, bringing you communications software for nearly every computer
and operating system on the planet since 1981.
Kermit software offers interactive and scripted file transfer and
management, terminal emulation, Unicode-aware character-set
conversion, and/or Internet security for Windows, Linux, Mac OS
X, FreeBSD, OpenBSD, NetBSD, Solaris, AIX, HP-UX, Tru64 Unix, SCO, QNX,
OS/2, VMS, DOS, IBM mainframes, and dozens of other platforms, new and old,
over the Internet as well as serial ports and modems. Internet security
methods include Kerberos IV, Kerberos V, SSL, TLS, SSH, and SRP.
Internet protocols include traditional and secure Telnet, traditional
and secure FTP, traditional and secure HTTP. All functions can be automated
using Kermit's built-in cross-platform transport-independent script
programming language. Terminal emulations for Windows include
VT100, VT220, VT320, ANSI, HP, IBM, Linux Console, Sun Console, QNX, AT386,
SCO ANSI, SNI 97801, Televideo, Wyse, and many others.
The nonprofit Kermit Project is entirely
self-supporting and requires revenue from
software licenses to continue its work.
You can also help by always accessing Amazon.Com
through
☞
THIS LINK (explain).
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NO SPAM OR VIRUS E-MAIL ORIGINATES FROM THE KERMIT PROJECT.
If you receive
junk mail from a Kermit Project address or member, it is forged.
For more on this topic, CLICK HERE.
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The Kermit Project /
Columbia University /
kermit@columbia.edu /
21 September 2010