Using C-Kermit
Digital Press
2nd Edition
Published on 20. December 1996
Book
Paperback/Softback
648 pages
978-1-55558-164-0 (ISBN)
Description
The world's most portable communications software, C-Kermit runs on computers
ranging from desktop PCs to colossal supercomputers as a serial and modem
communications package as well as a TCP/IP network client and server. It offers
automatic dialing, terminal sessions, fast and reliable file transfer, a
powerful script programming language, and international character-set
translation-all in a consistent, cross-platform manner.
Using C-Kermit: Communication Software, Second Edition is the new and definitve
reference for C-Kermit 6.0, expanded and updated to describe fully all of its
new features with brand-new tutorials on today's high-speed modems and how to
get the most out of them.
Some noteworthy features of this reference are:
- The most sophisticated discussion of modems, telephones numbers, dialing
directories, and dialing available anywhere
- New techniques for achieving faster and faster file transfer
- A new chapter on external protocols such as XMODEM, YMODEM, and ZMODEM
- Expanded coverage of TCP/IP, X.25, DECnet, NETBIOS, and other networks
- Automatic client/server features
- Support for many new platforms - most notably Windows 95, Windows NT, and
Stratus VOS
- Support for many new character sets
- Massive improvements in the power and usability of the script language
Like the first edition, the second edition of Using C-Kermit includes complete
reference material: character tables, tables of escape sequences, an "acronym
decoder," an excellent index, and an extensive bibliography.
Frank da Cruz is manager of Communications Software Development at Columbia
University. He was the leader of the group that invented the Kermit file
transfer protocol and wrote the first Kermit programs. He is the author of
Kermit, A File Transfer Protocol, published by Digital Press.
Christine M. Gianone is manager of the Kermit Project at Columbia University.
She was a major contributor to the design of the Kermit file transfer protocol
and to the design of MS-DOS Kermit and C-Kermit. She is the author of Using
MS-DOS Kermit, published by Digital Press. Frank and Christine "are" Kermit:
they manage all of the functions of the Kermit group at Columbia, from helping
users to putting out new products.
ranging from desktop PCs to colossal supercomputers as a serial and modem
communications package as well as a TCP/IP network client and server. It offers
automatic dialing, terminal sessions, fast and reliable file transfer, a
powerful script programming language, and international character-set
translation-all in a consistent, cross-platform manner.
Using C-Kermit: Communication Software, Second Edition is the new and definitve
reference for C-Kermit 6.0, expanded and updated to describe fully all of its
new features with brand-new tutorials on today's high-speed modems and how to
get the most out of them.
Some noteworthy features of this reference are:
- The most sophisticated discussion of modems, telephones numbers, dialing
directories, and dialing available anywhere
- New techniques for achieving faster and faster file transfer
- A new chapter on external protocols such as XMODEM, YMODEM, and ZMODEM
- Expanded coverage of TCP/IP, X.25, DECnet, NETBIOS, and other networks
- Automatic client/server features
- Support for many new platforms - most notably Windows 95, Windows NT, and
Stratus VOS
- Support for many new character sets
- Massive improvements in the power and usability of the script language
Like the first edition, the second edition of Using C-Kermit includes complete
reference material: character tables, tables of escape sequences, an "acronym
decoder," an excellent index, and an extensive bibliography.
Frank da Cruz is manager of Communications Software Development at Columbia
University. He was the leader of the group that invented the Kermit file
transfer protocol and wrote the first Kermit programs. He is the author of
Kermit, A File Transfer Protocol, published by Digital Press.
Christine M. Gianone is manager of the Kermit Project at Columbia University.
She was a major contributor to the design of the Kermit file transfer protocol
and to the design of MS-DOS Kermit and C-Kermit. She is the author of Using
MS-DOS Kermit, published by Digital Press. Frank and Christine "are" Kermit:
they manage all of the functions of the Kermit group at Columbia, from helping
users to putting out new products.
Reviews / Votes
"For those of us that communicate in heterogeneous envinronments ... this book is perfect. ... I personally think that every professional sys admin should take a lookat this book and get a copy of the package from Columbia University..."
- Sys Admin Magazine, July 1997
"For those who insist that computer documentation is, by nature, turgid, obtuse, and boring, you haven't read anything by Frank da Cruz and Christine Gianone. Technical
writers take note: *this* is how you do it."
- Rob Slade, comp.dcom.telecom, June 1997
More details
Edition
2nd edition
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Elsevier Science & Technology
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Internet/Networking users of file transfer software
(ie downloading/uploading/transfering files across the internet/networks)
Edition type
New edition
Dimensions
Height: 246 mm
Width: 189 mm
Weight
1040 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-55558-164-0 (9781555581640)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Previous edition
Frank da Cruz | Christine M. Gianone
Using C-Kermit
Book
02/1993
2nd Edition
Butterworth-Heinemann
€54.11
Article exhausted; check for reprint
Persons
Frank da Cruz is Manager of Communications SoftwareDevelopment at Columbia University. He was the leader of the group that created the Kermit file transfer protocol and wrote the first Kermit programs. He has written several books for Digital Press, including Kermit: A File Transfer Protocol and two editions of Using C-Kermit, and is principalauthor of the C-Kermit software for Unix and VMS and co-author of Kermit 95 for Windows.
Author
Manager, Communications Software Development, Columbia University
Manager, The Kermit Project, Columbia University
Content
Running C-Kermit * Getting Connected * The Basics of File Transfer * Solving File Transfer Problems * Using a Kermit Server * International Character Sets