Remote Login

Posted by The Beyand | 7:06 AM | 0 comments »

The network terminal protocol (TELNET) allows a user to log in
on any other computer on the network. You start a remote session by
specifying a computer to connect to. From that time until you finish
the session, anything you type is sent to the other computer. Note
that you are really still talking to your own computer. But the telnet
program effectively makes your computer invisible while it is
running. Every character you type is sent directly to the other
system. Generally, the connection to the remote computer behaves much
like a dialup connection. That is, the remote system will ask you to
log in and give a password, in whatever manner it would normally ask a
user who had just dialed it up. When you log off of the other
computer, the telnet program exits, and you will find yourself talking
to your own computer. Microcomputer implementations of telnet
generally include a terminal emulator for some common type of
terminal. (See RFC's 854 and 855 for specifications for telnet. By the
way, the telnet protocol should not be confused with Telenet, a vendor
of commercial network services.)
 

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