Posted by
timothy
on from the ssh-don't-tell-anyone dept.
Mithix writes "Gizmodo is reporting that the popular (and free) SSH client PuTTY is now in beta for Symbian OS, the OS of choice for the Nokia Series 60, the Nokia 9200 Communicator Series, and the N-Gage. Finally, something redeeming for the N-Gage?"
Re:Ah, PuTTY
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 2, Informative
OpenSSH for Cygwin doesn't produce a log file. Instead, it writes to the event log, and it only writes diagnostic messages not the entire session output.
It's good
by
squiggleslash
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· Score: 4, Informative
I use PuTTY on my Nokia 9290 (and have done for a while.) It "just works".
One thing to be aware of though is that it is limited to SSH - the PuTTY client for Windows does telnet and rlogin too, but not this version.
-- You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
PuTTY for Windows is the best software of its kind. When I need an SSH/XTerm window to a Linux box, PuTTY is what I use, because I can't find an alternative that works nearly as well. That being said:
PuTTY insists that you use default XWindows conventions for cutting and pasting. Even most XWindows software is more flexible than that, never mind a cross-platform app. It's a pain for somebody who works primarily in Windows.
Configuration is horribly idiosyncratic. Options are not arranged in anything like a logical fashion, creating or modifying sessions is a pain, and it's too easy to make a bunch of changes and then lose them.
Either the PuTTY people are totally bored by UI design issues, or they just like to torture people. I hate to complain, because it's basically good (even excellent) software, and the price is right. But come on, guys!
Re:PuTTY Experience
by
MS_is_the_best
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· Score: 2, Informative
Putty's authors advise you too use a 3rd party app for transparency (http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/wishlist/transparency.html).
Adding a bitmap will bloat the binary too much, according to them. But forks of putty which do this, exist. (only they are most of the time outdated).
I am still waiting for the Tab support, nowadays my desktop at work is full of putty windows, what is a bit annoying. (Screen doesn't work good in Cygwin..).
putty doesn't need cygwin, but you need putty even if you have cygwin.
cygwin's ssh client has some annoying problems, expecially when using curses programs. They are just annoyances, but why put up with them when you can get putty that works nearly flawlessly.
some j2me midp1.0 phones do support sockets(google search says that t616 doesn't though), in fact, almost all the recent one's. midp1.0 doesn't require it though. however, I'd be very skeptical of it being feasible to do a ssh client in one of them.
the series60 putty has been out for months already.
but yeah, people should not mix up feeble j2me apps and native symbian apps, the native one's have so much more power and access that j2me seems like a joke in comparision.
-- world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
OpenSSH for Cygwin doesn't produce a log file. Instead, it writes to the event log, and it only writes diagnostic messages not the entire session output.
One thing to be aware of though is that it is limited to SSH - the PuTTY client for Windows does telnet and rlogin too, but not this version.
You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
- PuTTY insists that you use default XWindows conventions for cutting and pasting. Even most XWindows software is more flexible than that, never mind a cross-platform app. It's a pain for somebody who works primarily in Windows.
- Configuration is horribly idiosyncratic. Options are not arranged in anything like a logical fashion, creating or modifying sessions is a pain, and it's too easy to make a bunch of changes and then lose them.
Either the PuTTY people are totally bored by UI design issues, or they just like to torture people. I hate to complain, because it's basically good (even excellent) software, and the price is right. But come on, guys!putty doesn't need cygwin, but you need putty even if you have cygwin.
cygwin's ssh client has some annoying problems, expecially when using curses programs. They are just annoyances, but why put up with them when you can get putty that works nearly flawlessly.
some j2me midp1.0 phones do support sockets(google search says that t616 doesn't though), in fact, almost all the recent one's. midp1.0 doesn't require it though. however, I'd be very skeptical of it being feasible to do a ssh client in one of them.
the series60 putty has been out for months already.
but yeah, people should not mix up feeble j2me apps and native symbian apps, the native one's have so much more power and access that j2me seems like a joke in comparision.
world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.