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- Info-Kermit Digest Mon, 17 Sep 1990 Volume 12 : Number 5
-
- Today's Topics:
-
- Announcing IBM Mainframe VM/CMS Kermit-370 Version 4.2.1
- Selecting CONTROLLER type in Kermit-370
- Announcing KERMIT-12 Version 10g
- Kermit Proposal SET FILE TYPE
- Prime8 Help for Dividing Source
- Re: A New Version of Kermit for OS/2 Presentation Manager
- Re: Info-Kermit Digest V12 #2
- Kermit incapatability with LSE
- Kermit 3.01 Arrow Key Problem
- 132 column mode in MS-Kermit?
- Kermit & Telebits
-
- Digest submissions may be sent to Info-Kermit@WATSUN.CC.COLUMBIA.EDU,
- requests for addition to or deletion from the Info-Kermit subscriber list to
- Info-Kermit-Request@WATSUN.CC.COLUMBIA.EDU or to KERMIT@CUVMA.BITNET.
-
- Kermit files may be obtained over networks and by mail order. On the
- Internetwork, use FTP to log in to host WATSUN.CC.COLUMBIA.EDU, a SUN-4/280
- running UNIX (SUNOS 4.1), IP host number 128.59.39.2. Login as user anonymous
- (note, lower case), any password, and GET or MGET (MULTIPLE GET) the desired
- files. The Kermit files are in directories kermit/a, kermit/b, kermit/c,
- kermit/d, and kermit/e. Test versions are in kermit/test. Binaries are in
- kermit/bin (use ftp in binary mode). You can also get Kermit files over the
- BITNET/EARN network; to get started send a message with text HELP to KERMSRV,
- the Kermit file server, at host CUVMA. For detailed instructions, read the
- file kermit/a/aanetw.hlp (AANETW.HLP on KERMSRV). To order by mail, request a
- complete list of Kermit versions and an order form from Kermit Distribution,
- Columbia University Center for Computing Activities, 612 West 115th Street,
- New York, NY 10025 USA.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Date: Wed, 1990 Sep 12 18:30 EDT
- From: "John F. Chandler" <PEPMNT@CFAAMP.HARVARD.EDU>
- Subject: Announcing IBM Mainframe VM/CMS Kermit-370 Version 4.2.1
- Keywords: IBM 370 Kermit, VM/CMS Kermit
- Xref: CMS Kermit, See VM/CMS Kermit, IBM 370 Kermit
-
- This is to announce the release of Kermit-370 version 4.2.1 for CMS. As
- usual, the new version comes in VM/SP and VM/XA/SP flavors, but the
- changes are the same for both.
-
- Version 4.2.1 has several improvements over 4.2.0, the most important
- being:
-
- 1. Spurious flow-control "packets" from MS-DOS Kermit are now ignored.
-
- 2. Overflow of the fullscreen buffer is now avoided when the receiving
- Kermit asks for 2K packets.
-
- 3. Kermit-370 now supports transfers in LATIN2 and LATIN3 and file
- storage in CP870, CP880, and CP905. In addition, L1, L2, and L3 are
- recognized as aliases for the three LATIN sets, and two-character
- abbreviations are accepted for the other transfer sets as well. The
- new sets add support for Afrikaans, Albanian, Catalan, Croatian,
- Czech, Esperanto, Galician, Hungarian, Maltese, Polish, Romanian,
- Slovak, Slovene, and Turkish.
-
- 4. Kermit-370 supports file transfers through the IBM 3174 AEA with B2
- microcode. The support is restricted to terminals with the ASCII
- Graphics capability in three ways:
-
- a) The terminal type must be defined in the 3174 to support graphics
- (only the built-in VT241 and Tektronix 4205 types plus suitable
- user-defined terminal types).
-
- b) The line must be defined without an associated Host Addressable
- Printer.
-
- c) If the 3174 is owned by VTAM, the connection must be made with a
- logmode that allows the Read Partition Query (such as M2SDLCNQ).
-
- Kermit-370 automatically detects the B2 AEA and sets CONTROLLER
- accordingly (to AEA if graphics is allowed, to NONE if not, or to
- GRAPHICS if Query is denied). Since the 3174 supports full 8-bit
- communication, it may be useful to configure the ports for 8-bit
- data and to set both SEND and RECEIVE PARITY to NONE in Kermit-370.
-
- 5. Kermit-370 now uses the FILE COLLISION settings for all files in a
- group rather than just the first.
-
- 6. Kermit-370 has three new subcommands: REMOTE MAIL, REMOTE PRINT, and
- REMOTE SUBMIT. They transmit a file (or group of files via wild
- cards) tagged for mailing, printing, and submitting as job,
- respectively.
-
- The new release is in the form of updates to be applied to the 4.2.0
- source. The new files are IKCKER.UPD, IKCKER.BWR, IK0AAA.HLP, and
- IK0KER.UPD (the latter is only a catalog of all the updates, not the
- updates themselves). The new code has been tested on most known types
- of protocol converter (many thanks to the beta testers!) to make sure
- the 3174 support does not harm the existing support for Kermit file
- transfer, but problems may still turn up. Bug reports are welcome, as
- usual.
-
- A similar release 4.2.1 will soon be available for TSO and MUSIC.
-
- John
-
- [Ed. - Thanks, John! The new files are installed in kermit/b on watsun
- and are also available from KERMSRV@CUVMA on BITNET. This program is truly
- amazing in its adaptability to the infinitely varied 3270 emulation
- communications environment, and it is a groundbreaker in character set
- conversion. Let's hope that the other Kermit programs catch up in the latter
- department soon. For that to happen, we need examples and listings of the
- PC, UNIX, Macintosh, etc, character sets used for all the language supported
- by Latin Alphabets 1 through 5, Latin/Cyrillic, and others. If you have them,
- please send them in and we'll do our best to support them.]
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 1990 Sep 13 11:50 EDT
- From: "John F. Chandler" <PEPMNT@CFAAMP.HARVARD.EDU>
- Subject: Selecting CONTROLLER type in Kermit-370
- Keywords: IBM 370 Kermit
-
- One of the improvements in release 4.2.1 is a more thorough DEBUG output
- that proved very useful in bringing the support for the IBM 3174 to
- completion. This enhancement makes no difference to routine file transfer,
- but it raises the possibility of determining easily the exact response of
- any kind of protocol converter to the efforts of Kermit to decide which
- CONTROLLER type to use. To this end, I ask all installers of release 4.2.1
- to take a few minutes and create a debug log for each (fullscreen)
- environment where Kermit-370 might be used, provided, that is, that you do
- not apply the optional update SC89058. Even if you have applied SC89058 in
- the past, it might be worthwhile to omit it as an experiment. The desired
- debug log is created by starting Kermit-370 and entering the subcommands SET
- DEBUG I/O LONG, SET LINE, and QUIT. I would be grateful if you would send
- the resulting KER LOG along with the following information: level of VTAM
- (if any) driving the session, model of front-end processor (if any) and
- software, model of protocol converter (if any) and software. These results
- would be interesting even for real IBM 3270-type terminals or protocol
- converters unable to support Kermit file transfers. It is possible that the
- information collected will enable Kermit to distinguish certain environments
- that currently fail to trigger the correct default CONTROLLER type.
-
- John
-
- P.S. My e-mail address is:
-
- Internet: PEPMNT@CFAAMP.HARVARD.EDU
- BITNET: PEPMNT@CFAAMP
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu Sep 6 1990 11:00:00 EDT
- From: Charles Lasner <lasner@watsun.cc.columbia.edu>
- Subject: Announcing KERMIT-12 Version 10g
- Keywords: PDP-8, PDP-12, VT-78, DECmate, OS/8
- Xref: DEC PDP, See PDP
-
- This is a maintenance release of KERMIT-12. A minor problem relating to
- incorrect CPU identification messages has been fixed. The problem only
- appeared when the CPU was a KK-8A single-board CPU; this configuration was
- previously untested. Thanks to Johnny Billquist of Sweden for his
- assistance in pinning down the problem.
-
- KERMIT-12 operation was not affected in any other way, as only the
- DECmate-specific identification is crucial; earlier PDP-8 family members
- are treated in a generic fashion except for the "frill" of model
- identification (all PDP-8, PDP-12, VT-78 models use software-compatible
- port hardware; all DECmates are incompatible and must be handled
- individually). We are still looking for volunteers to test the various
- DECmate III and DECmate III+ configurations.
-
- The rest of the release concerns the encoding of files into the
- "ASCII-fied" format. The format has been modified to be more robust, since
- the original method has proven itself to be problematic in certain
- practical circumstances (as reported in K12MIT.BWR).
-
- The new ENCODing format is based on five-bit encoding with repeat
- compression. As much as 256 repeated 12-bit words will be expressed in a
- five character field. Any repeated 12-bit value can be compressed, as
- opposed to simple zero compression, as in other common encoding schemes.
- (PDP-8 files often have repeated strings of the value 7402 octal, which is
- the HLT instruction.)
-
- The only printing characters required to pass through any distribution
- "path" are 0-9, A-V, X, and Z. The alphabetic characters can also be
- lower-case. All command lines are framed by ( and ); all data lines are
- framed by < and >. These characters can be changed if required, as they
- are not part of the data; they could be replaced by W (w) and Y (y) if
- necessary. (Changing the framing characters requires slight modification
- of the ENCODing and DECODing programs.)
-
- The new format supports a 60-bit file checksum to ensure proper decoding at
- the other end. The former 12-bit checksum could be compromised on long
- files.
-
- The new ENCODing programs creates internal (REMARK commands stating the
- ENCODed file's creation date, and the original file's creation date. This
- will aid in distribution of PDP-8 files where the user wishes to maintain
- proper file dates. The date algoritm used is the one proscribed by the
- OS/8 DIRECT program. (OS/8 systems only OPTIONALLY support file dates, and
- there is an eight-year "anomaly" associated with identifying the year; the
- user must determine the credibility of the year portion of the date. The
- value provided by the ENCODE program for the original file creation date is
- always today's year or the previous seven years as necessary; this field
- will not be provided if the system doesn't support the required AIW
- feature.)
-
- Overall file size is theoretically as much as 6/5 of the original encoding
- format (as the earlier format was based on six-bit encoding), but actual
- size varies downward due to slightly less file overhead (wider lines mean
- less CR LF; there is now less automatically generated verbiage), and the
- random improvement afforded by simple repeat compression.
-
- Virtually all K12MIT-related files are re-released at this time. There are
- several new files. Due to the "fragile" nature of TECO macro files, the
- file K12GLB.TEC is no longer being distributed directly; the file K12GLB.ENC
- is the same file in the new ENCODE format.
-
- The new files have been installed in the regular places:
-
- BITNET/EARN Internet
- KERMSRV@CUVMA watsun.cc.columbia.edu Description
-
- K12MIT ENC kermit/d/k12mit.enc Encoded binary of KERMIT-12
- K12MIT DOC kermit/d/k12mit.doc Documentation file
- K12MIT BWR kermit/d/k12mit.bwr Updated "beware" file
- K12MIT DSK kermit/d/k12mit.dsk Description of RX02 diskettes
- K12MIT ANN kermit/d/k12mit.ann Announcement of KERMIT-12
- K12MIT UPD kermit/d/k12mit.upd Release update file
- K12DEC PAL kermit/d/k12dec.pal Decoding program
- K12ENC PAL kermit/d/k12enc.pal Encoding program
- K12PL8 ENC kermit/d/k12pl8.enc Encoded binary of PAL8 Ver B0
- K12CRF ENC kermit/d/k12crf.enc Encoded binary of CREF Ver B0
- K12MIT PAL kermit/d/k12mit.pal Main source file of KERMIT-12
- K12PCH PAL kermit/d/k12pch.pal KERMIT-12 source patch file
- K12CLR PAL kermit/d/k12clr.pal Memory clearing file
- K12MIT LST kermit/d/k12mit.lst Symbols-only listing file
- K12PRM PAL kermit/d/k12prm.pal Sample VT-78 config file
- K12GLB ENC kermit/d/k12glb.enc Encoded TECO file macro
- K12ENC DOC kermit/d/k12enc.doc Encoding format description
-
- [Ed. - Many thanks, Charles. Believe it or not, there are still quite a
- few PDP-8 based systems out there, and even some PDP-12s. You won't find
- very many other new software packages that support them!]
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 6 Sep 90 08:47 CST
- From: <PK6811S@DRAKE.BITNET>
- Subject: Kermit Proposal SET FILE TYPE
- Keywords: Kermit Protocol
-
- Please accept these remarks regarding the proposed SET FILE TYPE extension
- to Kermit.
-
- 1. The labels are transmitted in normal Data packets. Therefore an
- ignorant Kermit receiver will write them into the file as data. This is a
- MAJOR change to the protocol, which has always provided transparent file
- exchange. When reading such a file, how is a program to know that labels
- have already been included? Will these files cause problems for other
- file-transfer protocols such as Xmodem?
-
- [Ed. - No, it won't cause problems with Xmodem. Xmodem or any other file
- transfer protocol, including a Kermit program that does not know about labeled
- files, will store or send a labeled file just like any other file, without
- interpreting the label information.]
-
- 2. Stored-in-File labels are incompatible with the MacBinary protocol in
- standard use on Macintosh computers.
-
- [Ed. - That's true. But MacBinary format cannot be adapted to other kinds
- of file systems such as VAX/VMS. Kermit can still be used to transfer
- MacBinary files, and a MacBinary option will be added to Macintosh Kermit
- before its next release.]
-
- 3. The sending operator must now decide whether to send with labels or not.
- Previously, the sender had no choices to make. We should not be adding
- complexity to the process if we can help it.
-
- [Ed. - This is true. However, without labels it is impossible to transfer a
- complex file and retain all of its features. Therefore this proposal
- addresses only computers with complex file systems, like VAX/VMS, IBM
- mainframes, etc, and does not affect other computers. Users can continue to
- use Kermit on these systems in the normal way, but now they will also have
- an additional tool to let them successfully transfer files that they could
- not transfer before.]
-
- 4. Perhaps a better approach would be to use:
-
- SET FILE TYPE system type
-
- Where 'system' identifies the receiving file management system,
- (RMS, VSAM, etc.) and 'type' identifies the appropriate attributes.
- Example:
-
- SET FILE TYPE RMS INDEXED
-
- where RMS represents Vax RMS file management, and INDEXED identifies
- the incoming file as an indexed file.
-
- This approach requires that the sending and receiving routines be
- similarly intelligent about the information required to successfully
- transmit and write the file, but allows unintelligent intermediary
- programs (repositories, bulletin boards, etc.) to receive and send
- the files without any special settings (other than SET FILE TYPE BINARY).
-
- [Ed. - It is a cardinal principle of Kermit or any other well-designed file
- transfer protocol that any particular computer must not be required to have
- knowledge about the formats and conventions of any other kind of computer.
- Rather, each Kermit implementation knows only the data formats of its own
- computer and those defined for the "standard intermediate representation" on
- the wire. Otherwise, hundreds of different programs would require
- modifications to know about hundreds of different computers. Not only is
- this a waste of computing and human resources, but it's a moving target.]
-
- It also allows the following sequence to take place:
-
- machine 1 Kermit send -> machine 2 Kermit receive (FILE TYPE BINARY)
- machine 2 BrandX send -> machine 3 BrandX receive
- machine 3 Kermit send -> machine 4 Kermit receive (FILE TYPE xxx ttt)
-
- Machine 1 sends the file BELIEVING that the receiver knows how to handle
- it, but only the machine 4 program needs to know. However, machine 3
- can also use the file, if it recognizes, or is told to recognize, the
- file type.
-
- [Ed. - The Labeled File proposal works the same way.]
-
- A simplification of this approach would be to use SET FILE TYPE AUTO
- which would cause the receiver to perform some recognition process
- before writing the file.
-
- [Ed. - The labeled file proposal includes this possibility too.]
-
- We have recently developed a Macintosh VT100 terminal emulator which
- incorporates Kermit file exchange, and automatically distinguishes TEXT
- documents from applications and formatted documents. The users need only
- tell the Vax to SET FILE TYPE ASCII/BINARY depending on whether they intend
- to edit it on the Vax, or transfer it to another Mac. The program pre-pends
- the Macbinary header for non-text documents when sending, and recognizes it
- when receiving. I think you'll agree that the LABELED proposal only adds
- complexity to our situation, and requires users to make unnecessary
- decisions about the process.
-
- [Ed. - Your application seems to be Macintosh-centered, in the sense that
- you regard the VAX as a repository for Macintosh applications, which you
- encode in MacBinary, but you make no provision for storing VAX applications
- or complex binary VAX files on the Mac. For your purposes, MacBinary will
- do just fine.]
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Tue, 28 Aug 90 17:27:31 EDT
- From: John M. Crawford <CRAW4D@prime.cob.ohio-state.edu>
- Subject: Prime8 Help for Dividing Source
- Keywords: Prime Kermit
-
- Enclosed is a short file which provides the necessary Primos editor (ED)
- tricks to divide (and then build) Kermit 8.12 for Primos. You might consider
- appending it to the PRIME8.ANN file (or another) for general distribution to
- Prime kermit users.
-
- John M. Crawford (614) 292-1741 Computing Services Center
- College of Business
- craw4d+@osu.edu 1775 College Road
- craw4d@prime.cob.ohio-state.edu The Ohio State University
- crawford-j@osu-20.ircc.ohio-state.edu Columbus, Ohio 43210
-
- [Ed. - Many thanks! Your ED file is now enshrined in PRIME8.ANN.]
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Wed, 29 Aug 90 10:23:11 PLT
- From: Wim Bonner <27313853%WSUVM1@cuvmb.cc.columbia.edu>
- Subject: Re: A New Version of Kermit for OS/2 Presentation Manager
- Keywords: OS/2 Kermit
-
- The message said that the Kermit files were in the OS/2 test area pending
- comments from the user community. Is this where I make comments?
-
- I tried the Kermit program just now. It has an annoying habit of going full
- screen. I have a 1024x768 screen, so an 80,25 screen will fit in less than
- a quarter of the screen, and leave room for much more on the screen.
-
- I am running OS/2 1.2, and was not able to get the lights on my modem to
- blink when I typed characters after Connecting. That is normally a good
- indication something is wrong. All of the other communication programs that
- I've tried work fine.
-
- Wim Bonner - 27313853@WSUVM1.CSC.WSU.EDU - V(509)335-4436
-
- [Ed. - Thanks. We'll collect all such comments and put them in an envelope
- and send them back to the contributor. Meanwhile, has anyone else gotten
- the program to work?]
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Sat 25 Aug 90 11:51:37-CDT
- From: Rob Pettengill <SW.PETTENGILL@MCC.COM>
- Subject: Re: Info-Kermit Digest V12 #2
- Keywords: MS-DOS Kermit 3.02, Macros, Variables, Scripts
-
- The behavior of the macro positional parameters has changed in the new test
- release of MSKermit 3.02. Previously when a take script was taken in a
- macro the \%n positional arguments were defined in the take script - with
- this version they are undefined.
-
- The previous behavior was reasonable for a script. Are you tring to make
- take files behave more like macros? If so then it should be possible to
- pass positional arguments to the take files explicitly. In any case the
- behavior in the current 3.02 does not seem desirable.
-
- ;rob
-
- [Ed. - That was a mistake, which has been corrected in the latest 3.02
- release. Macro parameters are now on a call stack so if macro A calls macro
- B, A's parameters are still intact when B returns. The mistake was indeed
- that a TAKE file was being treated like a macro. In the latest edit, it is
- not: if macro A TAKEs a command file, A's parameters are available to the
- TAKE file, as before.]
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 29 Jul 90 23:18:00 CDT
- From: "COLLINS, STERRETT" <z3col@ttacs1.ttu.edu>
- Subject: Kermit incapatability with LSE
- Keywords: MS-DOS Kermit 3.0, LSE, VAX/VMS, Terminal Emulation
-
- I am using MS-Kermit v3.0 on a Kaypro 286 operating MS-DOS v3.21, connecting
- to a VaxCluster operating VMS v5.3 . I have tried using the language
- sensitive editor (LSE v3.0), but Kermit fails to emulate the terminal that
- LSE expects. I have tried setting terminal/nodec_crt3, which partially
- corrects the problem, but still not satisfactorily. I am not sure that LSE
- does not think that every member of the VT300_Family of terminals is a Regis
- terminal. I have access to a Regis_Emulating communications software
- package, which I do not normally use for licensing considerations, but
- which, if I switch to that after having entered LSE using Kermit, is able to
- emulate the terminal properly.
-
- The possible answers would seem to be:
-
- "The operating system does not successfully detect the correct terminal
- characteristics."
-
- "The Operating system does successfully detect the correct terminal
- characteristics, but this information is not propperly transferred to LSE."
- I only know that SHOW TERMINAL reveals that it does not have the REGIS
- characteristic, but does have the SIXEL charactersitic, and the DECCRT_3
- characteristic.
-
- sterrett collins
- physics department
- texas tech university
-
- [From jrd - Another case where Kermit command SET DISPLAY 8 needs be done
- to avoid clobbering the 8-bit control sequences sent by the host.]
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Mon, 23 Jul 90 19:44:42 GMT
- From: seminara@penelope.oswego.edu (Greg Seminara)
- Subject: Kermit 3.01 Arrow Key Problem
- Keywords: MS-DOS Kermit, Arrow Keys
-
- Arrow keys work only sporadically when connected to a UNIX host from a DOS
- PC running Kermit 3.01 if you are using a full-screen "curses" application.
- Seems to be sending either the wrong ansi sequence or is sending the
- sequence too fast. If you press arrow keys with a significant pause between
- each press, keys usually work OK. Emulation is vt102 for kermit and TERM is
- set to "kermit" or "vt100". Kermit 2.32a and before work fine under
- identical conditions. - HELP!
-
- [From jrd - your Unix host has a problem with communications. If characters
- in a control sequence are NOT sent in rapid succession then EMACS reacts
- differently than expected. In addition, some host machines apparently have
- intrinsic difficulties running in true full duplex. Unix loves to echo
- arriving characters willy nilly. So when Unix is sending a control sequence
- while one is arriving from Kermit and Unix is also echoing it then Kermit
- receives both sets of information with characters intermingled. If the
- sequences arrived separately then Kermit could cope. This is pretty silly
- behavior by Unix; the application should attempt supressing echos. There is
- nothing that Kermit (nor a real terminal) can do about it.]
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 30 Aug 90 14:28:57 CDT
- From: moore@ncsc.navy.mil (Moore)
- Subject: 132 column mode in MS-Kermit?
- Keywords: MS-DOS Kermit, 132 Columns, Screen Settings
-
- Greetings.
-
- I have a very persistent user here who wants the word directly from the
- horse's mouth regarding a feature of MS-Kermit:
-
- I've always thought that EGAs cannot do 132-column mode (except by simulating
- it in graphics mode). MS-Kermit doesn't change that, right? Isn't it the
- "responsibility" of the hardware to switch modes, and then Kermit just detects
- and uses that mode?
-
- [Ed. - True. Except that in version 3.0 and later it also supports automatic
- switching between 80 and 132 column mode via the COLS80.BAT and COLS132.BAT
- mechanism. That is, if Kermit gets the escape sequence telling it to switch
- modes, it will try to run the appropriate BAT file that does the PC- or
- adapter-specific things required to switch modes.]
-
- Can Kermit simulate 132-column mode by letting the user pan an 80-column
- window left and right?
-
- [Ed. - No.]
-
- Thanks for any help.
-
- Jim
- moore@NCSC.navy.mil
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 27 Aug 90 11:42:05 GMT
- From: mrsvr!saturn.shaw@uwm.edu (Tom Shaw ct58 Ex 5084)
- Subject: Kermit & Telebits
- Keywords: Modems
-
- I'm looking for anyone who has/is doing something similar to this: I am
- transferring binary and ASCII files across dial-up phone lines using Telebit
- Trailblazer Plus modems and kermit. The transfers are between 2 Suns, one
- running Sun OS 3.5 and the other running Sun OS 4.01. The size of the files
- range from 2500 bytes to 800kbytes. Does anyone have any tips, traps to
- avoid, benchmarks of what kind of rate I should be expecting for ASCII and
- binary files or any hands on advice. I am using kermit version 4E(72).
-
- In the past few weeks, I've heard stories about using Telebits in Germany,
- what kind of problem is there and are there any other countries I might have
- a problem connecting and transfering to?
-
- Any help would be appreciated. Thanks
-
- Tom
-
- [Ed. - As you may know, Telebits have Kermit built inside them. If you
- activate this feature, Computer A actually talks Kermit protocol to Modem A,
- Modem A talks high-speed error-correcting PEP protocol to Modem B and Modem B
- talks Kermit protocol to Computer B. This is all done transparently to the
- Kermit programs, but you have to put the originating Telebit into "Kermit
- spoof" mode. See your Telebit manual.]
-
- ------------------------------
-
- End of Info-Kermit Digest
- *************************
-
-
-
-