Columbia University Academic Information Systems INFO-KERMIT DIGEST VOLUME 22 Christine M. Gianone, Editor January 1995 - Table of Contents Volume 21, Number 1 1 MS-DOS Kermit 3.14 is Released 1 Volume 21, Number 2 4 Announcing IBM Mainframe Kermit-370 Version 4.3.1 4 Volume 21, Number 3 7 Announcing OS/2 C-Kermit 5A(191) 7 INFO-KERMIT DIGEST V21 #1 Page 1 Info-Kermit Digest Thu, 26 January 1995 Volume 21 : Number 1 Today's Topic: MS-DOS Kermit 3.14 is Released Directory: Kermit's World-Wide Web Home Page: http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ ftp: kermit.columbia.edu Newsgroups: comp.protocols.kermit.announce - Moderated comp.protocols.kermit.misc - Unmoderated LISTSERV: I$KERMIT@CUVMA.BITNET or CUVMA.CC.COLUMBIA.EDU - Submissions LISTSERV@CUVMA.BITNET or CUVMA.CC.COLUMBIA.EDU - Subscriptions KERMRSV: KERMSRV@CUVMA.BITNET or CUVMA.CC.COLUMBIA.EDU - Files (Send e-mail with text HELP to get started.) E-mail: kermit@columbia.edu (not an FTP mail server!) Post: Kermit Distribution Columbia University Academic Information Systems 612 West 115th Street New York, NY 10025 USA Fax: +1 212 663-8202 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- From: Christine M Gianone Subject: MS-DOS Kermit 3.14 is Released Date: Wed, 18 Jan 1995 12:00:00 EST Keywords: MS-DOS Kermit 3.14, Data General Terminal Emulation Keywords: Wyse Terminal Emulation, ANSI Terminal Emulation Keywords: "Recovery, File Transfer", Hebrew, Cyrillic, Japanese Kanji MS-DOS Kermit 3.14 communications software for DOS and Windows was released on January 18, 1995. Thanks to Joe Doupnik for the software itself, to Hirofumi Fujii and others for assistance with development in special areas, and to all the Beta testers for their test reports. Version 3.14 is available via anonymous ftp from kermit.columbia.edu as follows: DIRECTORY MODE DESCRIPTION kermit/archives/msvibm.zip binary Distribution diskette ZIP file kermit/a/msvibmzip.boo text Ditto, BOO-encoded Page 2 INFO-KERMIT DIGEST V21 #1 kermit/a/msvibmzip.uue text Ditto, uuencoded The text-encoded ZIP files are also available on BITNET from KERMSRV@CUVMA as MSVIBMZI.BOO and MSVIBMZI.UUE. Users are encouraged to obtain the complete package, as ZIP'd, because it includes many files that are interdependent. Unzip using the "-d" switch to preserve subdirectory structure. If you are unzipping over your old MS-DOS Kermit directory, be sure to preserve any customized files, especially MSCUSTOM.INI and DIALUPS.TXT first. After unzipping, read the top-level READ.ME for installation instructions and an overview of what is available. You may also order version 3.14 on diskette by mail; starting now, all "Using MS-DOS Kermit" shipments from Columbia will include the version 3.14 diskette (see below). When ordering from Columbia University, you have your choice of language for the user manual: English or French. The source code modules and other files are available as separate files in the kermit/a directory; see kermit/a/msaaaa.hlp for details. Remember, this software is copyrighted and can only be redistributed according to the provisions in our copyright notice; type "VERSION" at the MS-Kermit> prompt to see it. Likewise, the source code cannot be used without permission. This version represents a year and half of hard work. If you are using or will use this software, and you have not yet purchased the manual, please help support our continuing development efforts -- and help yourself get the most out of the software -- by doing so. For further information about our manuals, see our Web page or send an inquiry to kermit@columbia.edu, or write to us at the address above. Version 3.14 is of special interest to BBS operators and users, and should also be interesting to makers of BBS software. MS-DOS Kermit now comes in a special form that is designed to be used as an external protocol on a BBS. It supports Fossil drivers. It has an ANSI terminal emulator, etc etc. We hope this new release will popularize Kermit protocol in the BBS world, where it deserves an opportunity to show off some of its unique advantages. Here is a condensed list of new features of MS-DOS Kermit 3.14: . ANSI terminal emulation . Wyse-50 terminal emulation . Data General DASHER and DEC VT terminal emulation improvements . Kanji character-set translation during terminal emulation . HP-Roman8 terminal character-set . Control over timeslicing method in Windows, DesqView, OS/2, NT . Control over automatic video-mode switching . Selectable fore- and background colors for underline simulation . Additional scan codes for Alt/Ctrl/Shift - SpaceBar/EscKey combinations . DEC User Definable Keys (UDKs) now supported . Revised printer support for better interoperation with Novell CAPTURE . Additional control over TCP/IP and TELNET protocol features . Debugging display of TELNET options negotiation . Networking support for Telebit PPP INFO-KERMIT DIGEST V21 #1 Page 3 . TCP/IP fixes, speedups, and refinements . Multiple TCP/IP sessions to the same host now allowed . Support for Artisoft Int14 redirector . Support for Meridian Technology SuperLAT network connections . Workarounds for buggy SMC FDC37C665 UART simulator on Pentium motherboards . Support for Hayes ESP serial communications board in 16550A mode . Support for Fossil Drivers . SET SPEED 28800 . SET STOP-BITS {1,2} . User control over treatment of carrier signal on serial connections . Binary-mode file transfer recovery . Ability to send partial files manually . Control of run-length encoding . Improved client/server operation . Prompt string value now evaluated each time prompt is issued . ASK/ASKQ responses now taken literally . New APC command sends APC strings . Incoming APC strings ignored by default for safety . Revised CONNECT-mode status line for additional information . Separate CONNECT-mode help and one-character command menus . New script programming commands . Improved consistency of backslash-quoting in commands . New built-in string, file, and numeric functions . Additional built-in variables . Revised command line handling of substitution variables . Transaction log of file transfers now records detailed rejection reason if based on file attributes . Available also in special reduced forms for limited memory, e.g. for use on 256K systems, or as an external protocol on BBSs, etc. The new features are described in the KERMIT.UPD and other text files on the distribution diskette, which serve as a supplement to the user manual. ------------------------------ End of Info-Kermit Digest Page 4 INFO-KERMIT DIGEST V21 #2 Info-Kermit Digest Mon, 13 Febrary 1995 Volume 21 : Number 2 Today's Topic: Announcing IBM Mainframe Kermit-370 Version 4.3.1 Directory: Kermit's World-Wide Web Home Page: http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ ftp: kermit.columbia.edu Newsgroups: comp.protocols.kermit.announce - Moderated comp.protocols.kermit.misc - Unmoderated LISTSERV: I$KERMIT@CUVMA.BITNET or CUVMA.CC.COLUMBIA.EDU - Submissions LISTSERV@CUVMA.BITNET or CUVMA.CC.COLUMBIA.EDU - Subscriptions KERMRSV: KERMSRV@CUVMA.BITNET or CUVMA.CC.COLUMBIA.EDU - Files (Send e-mail with text HELP to get started.) E-mail: kermit@columbia.edu (not an FTP mail server!) Post: Kermit Distribution Columbia University Academic Information Systems 612 West 115th Street New York, NY 10025 USA Fax: +1 212 663-8202 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Thu, 1995 Feb 9 16:29 EST From: "John F. Chandler" Subject: Announcing IBM Mainframe Kermit-370 Version 4.3.1 Keywords: IBM Mainframe Kermit, VM/CMS Kermit, MVS/TSO Kermit, CICS Kermit Keywords: MUSIC Kermit, "Recovery, File Transfer" After a lengthy period of testing, version 4.3.1 of Kermit-370 is now released for general use on all the supported platforms. The new version is available in the form of updates relative to the base source files for 4.3.0, which remain part of the package. These updates include both generic and system-specific changes. They are summarized below and are described in somewhat more detail in the respective BWR files ik*.bwr in the distribution. The updates themselves are in ik*.upd. The generic changes (common to all variants) are as follows: Kermit-370... - honors the new level-1 restart/recovery mode, like the recently released versions of C-Kermit and MS-DOS Kermit. When a similarly INFO-KERMIT DIGEST V21 #2 Page 5 equipped Kermit is at the other end, an interrupted binary transfer can be resumed where it left off by issuing a RESEND instead of a SEND (same syntax). Attributes must be enabled. - honors a new protocol feature known as "WHATAMI". When Kermit-370 is in server mode, the user can issue a SET FILE TYPE to the local Kermit and have it take effect in the server as well. Setting the file type in both Kermits is still a good idea before doing transfers. - supports the UPDATE option of FILE COLLISION. With that option, an incoming file is rejected (on grounds of "date") if the transmitted time stamp is no later than that of an existing file of the same name. - sends an explicit NAK packet when it receives a bad data packet, instead of resending the previous ACK (which is nominally the same thing in Kermit protocol). - gives more accurate transfer statistics after uploads in server mode (via REMOTE KERMIT STAT). SPECIAL NOTE for sites that plan to use one of the alternate-language versions of Kermit-370: all the language-specific files were replaced last November in anticipation of release 4.3.1. The old ones are not compatible with 4.3.1, so be sure to get the current ik0v*.pkt file. The following changes have been made to the CMS variant: Kermit-CMS... - uses the date/time stamp, if any, received along with a file (instead of the date/time of reception). - has improved code for detecting the terminal controller type. The MUSIC variant has undergone major changes. Not least of these is a new, automated procedure for installing Kermit. The procedure, called IKMINS, is included in IKMKER.INS in the distribution. Additionally: Kermit-MUSIC... - supports file directories (which appeared in MUSIC 2.3) and userids longer than four bytes (which appeared in MUSIC 2.4). Sites running MUSIC 2.3 must include an additional update for compatibility (tagged SC94263 and supplied in IKMKER.BWR). - starts up in the current directory and leaves the user in whatever directory it is looking at when it quits. - emulates the MUSIC CD command. - passes any non-emulated MUSIC commands to the system for execution. Such commands are executed in a sub-task, and any non-zero completion code is reported. - attempts to prevent losing exclusive control over the screen during transfers by setting MESSAGE OFF (and restoring the old setting Page 6 INFO-KERMIT DIGEST V21 #2 afterwards). If control is lost anyway, Kermit attempts to recover. - correctly executes the GIVE CONTROL subcommand (for saving the current values of the CONTROL-CHAR table of prefixed and unprefixed control characters). There are no TSO-specific changes, just the generic ones listed above. There are two CICS-specific changes: Kermit-CICS... - uses the date/time stamp, if any, received along with a file (in preference for the date/time of reception). This is similar to the corresponding change for CMS, but applies only to files in the Kermit-maintained directories (HELP/TAKE files). - offers compatibility with CICS 3.3. This has not been fully tested. Other projects are pending for Kermit-CICS, awaiting volunteers to help implement the necessary code. In particular, the external drivers for spool files and arbitrary MVS data sets still need work. Anyone interested in helping should contact John Chandler or . Many thanks to the beta testers who have helped work out the bugs in the new release. Above all, thanks to Christian Robert and Paul Parker for all their help in upgrading Kermit-MUSIC, and to Bert Morton for contributing the CICS 3.3 compatibility code. [Ed. - Many thanks, John! The new IBM Mainframe Kermit version is available on kermit.columbia.edu as ik0*.*, plus: ikc*.* for VM/CMS ikm*.* for MUSIC ikt*.* for MVS/TSO (and ROSCOE) ikx*.* for CICS and also from BITNET KERMSRV at CUVMA.] ------------------------------ End of Info-Kermit Digest INFO-KERMIT DIGEST V21 #3 Page 7 Info-Kermit Digest Tue, 25 Apr 1995 Volume 21 : Number 3 Today's Topics: Announcing OS/2 C-Kermit 5A(191) Directory: Kermit's World-Wide Web Home Page: http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ ftp: kermit.columbia.edu Newsgroups: comp.protocols.kermit.announce - Moderated comp.protocols.kermit.misc - Unmoderated LISTSERV: I$KERMIT@CUVMA.BITNET or CUVMA.CC.COLUMBIA.EDU - Submissions LISTSERV@CUVMA.BITNET or CUVMA.CC.COLUMBIA.EDU - Subscriptions KERMRSV: KERMSRV@CUVMA.BITNET or CUVMA.CC.COLUMBIA.EDU - Files (Send e-mail with text HELP to get started.) E-mail: kermit@columbia.edu (not an FTP mail server!) Post: Kermit Distribution Columbia University Academic Information Systems 612 West 115th Street New York, NY 10025-7721 USA Fax: +1 212 663-8202 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Mon, 24 Apr 1995 12:00:00 EDT From: Christine M Gianone Subject: Announcing OS/2 C-Kermit 5A(191) Keywords: C-Kermit, OS/2 C-Kermit This is to announce the release of OS/2 C-Kermit 5A(191). If you have a Web browser, you are encouraged to read this notice in hypertext format on the Web at the following URL, because there is a lot more information in it (hypertext links): http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/cko191.html If you are already familiar with OS/2 C-Kermit, feel free to skip past the following fifty lines (about two 24-line screens). OS/2 C-Kermit is Columbia University's full-function native communication software package for OS/2 that works uniformly over: Page 8 INFO-KERMIT DIGEST V21 #3 . Serial connections, direct or dialed, all speeds. . TCP/IP network connections, including SLIP. . DECnet PATHWORKS LAT connections. . LAN and/or interprocess connections such as NETBIOS and Named Pipes. . Asynchronous communication servers. Offering: . Faithful ANSI, VT220, VT102, VT100, and VT52 terminal emulations with all the expected add-ons -- rollback, key mapping, color control, printer control, Compose key, screen & session capture, etc. . A complete implementation of the Kermit file transfer protocol, including all the most advanced features for highest performance, the new recovery capability, as well as auto-uplodad and -download. . A powerful and portable script programming language. . A large repertoire of character-set translations. . Dialing and services directories. . Easy access to external protocols (e.g. P.EXE for X/Y/Zmodem). And lots of OS/2-specific features, including: . Advanced user-customizable mouse operations. . Full compatibility with the OS/2 PM Clipboard. . Use of OS/2 System Sounds during command and terminal modes. . Work Place Shell integration through program objects. . Alternative REXX macro programming extensions. . Full support for HPFS and Extended Attributes during file transfers. . SLIPTERM compatibility. . Integration with IBM WebExplorer. . The ability to transfer entire directory trees from one OS/2 system to another, with all file attributes preserved. . Multiple threads for efficient task scheduling and low CPU load. . Fast semaphores for intraprocess communication. With its wide range of features and communication methods, OS/2 C-Kermit is ideally suited to OS/2 users who: . Want to communicate with a diverse assortment of hosts and services. . Want to use the same application for serial and network connections, e.g. for home and office use. . Want a better TELNET (with rollback, key mapping, colors, scripting). . Want a TELNET that can also transfer files. . Want to communicate in languages other than English. . Want to write script programs that are portable to many platforms. Space does not permit listing all the features of previous versions of OS/2 C-Kermit, but if you want to know more, feel free to visit our Web site starting at URL: http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/os2.html The rest of this announcement is pretty much a repetition of the Beta Test announcement. Except that the following features were added during the Beta test: . ISO 2022 character-set designation and invocation in VT220 emulation. INFO-KERMIT DIGEST V21 #3 Page 9 . Protected fields in VT220 emulation. . New MOVE and MMOVE commands for "moving" files. . Host-initiated autoprint now supported (separate from transparent print). C-Kermit Version 5A(191) is a brand-new 32-bit release for OS/2 2.00 and later, including Warp. It adds the following major new features: . Dramatic speed improvements . Sizeable terminal screens. . New and improved mouse functions. . Improved TELNET client functions. . Incoming TCP/IP connections. . SLIP dialing. . Cyrillic (Russian) terminal emulation. . Soft fonts for Hebrew, Cyrillic, and East European terminal emulation. . The new features that were added during the Beta test, listed just above. . Numerous fixes. And many lesser ones. In more detail: SPEED IMPROVEMENTS CONNECT mode -- terminal emulation -- is now incredibly snappy on both serial and network connections, in both window and fullscreen sessions. C-Kermit 5A(191) processes incoming data in parallel with screen updating. Furthermore, the screen is now updated far more efficiently than before. To give an idea of the speed improvement, we used a ripple-test benchmark that scrolls 1000 80-column lines of text, obtaining the following display timings for various TELNET clients attached to a 10 Mb/sec Ethernet network running on the same PC in a fullscreen session: C-Kermit 5A(190) 24 sec IBM Telnet 22 sec (TCP/IP 1.2.1) MS-DOS Kermit 12 sec (v3.14 under DOS, not under OS/2) C-Kermit 5A(191) 5 sec In an OS/2 window, the same test takes only 7 seconds, compared to 55 seconds in the previous release -- about an 800% improvement. The new display management model has also been used to accomplish several other astounding feats: . Terminal sessions remain active behind popup help screens. . Incoming material is processed even when screen is rolled back. . Copy-and-paste can span multiple screens (more about this below). Meanwhile, serial port handling is now far more efficient, putting less load on the CPU, allowing serial-port intput/output to take place at high speeds without seriously impacting the rest of the system. SIZEABLE TERMINAL SCREENS You asked for VT100 132-column mode, now you've got it and a lot more too. In Warp window sessions, C-Kermit now supports any combination of screen Page 10 INFO-KERMIT DIGEST V21 #3 height and width, up to 255 columns and 254 rows with a maximum screen area of 8192 characters. In fullscreen sessions the terminal screen can now use 40, 80, or 132 columns and 24, 42, 49, or 59 rows. Not all combinations are supported by all video hardware. Warp is not required. Host-directed screen-width switching in VT100, VT102, and VT220 emulation is now implemented for 80-column and 132-column modes when the video adapter supports it. Screen dimensions are automatically reported to the host on TELNET connections if the TELNET server supports (and uses) the "NAWS" option. SOFT FONTS C-Kermit 5A knows a lot of character sets and translates between any pair of them. But in OS/2, we have another problem: how to see the right characters on the screen. For example, in version 5A(190) we added support for Hebrew terminal emulation, which works very nicely if you happen to have a Hebrew version of OS/2 (which you can only get in Israel), but is useless otherwise -- e.g. to Hebrew and Yiddish scholars in the USA, because, until now there was no way to get a Hebrew code page onto a US version of OS/2. The new version of OS/2 C-Kermit comes with the following soft fonts that you can load in a fullscreen session, for use in the terminal window: CP437 - Original PC code page CP850 - "Multilingual" (West Europe) code page CP852 - East Europe Roman Alphabet code page (for Czech, Polish, etc) CP862 - Hebrew code page CP866 - Cyrillic (Russian, Belorussian, and Ukrainian) code page So now, no matter what OS/2 National Language version you have, you can use OS/2 C-Kermit to conduct terminal sessions in at least the following languages: Albanian, Belorussian, Bulgarian, Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English, Faeroese, Finnish, French, German, Hebrew, Hungarian, Icelandic, Irish, Italian, Ladino, Latin, Macedonian, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Serbian, Slovak, Slovene, Spanish, Swedish, Swiss, Ukrainian, and Yiddish. Thanks to Joseph (Yossi (Yogi)) Gil at the Technion in Haifa, Israel, for furnishing these public-domain fonts. CYRILLIC TERMINAL EMULATION OK, we added a Cyrillic font, so now you can read those Russian newsgroups and Web pages. But if you don't have a Russian (or Ukrainian, or Belorussian) keyboard, how do you TYPE Russian characters? The new C-Kermit release adds a Russian keyboard mode that includes: . The Microsoft Russian DOS keyboard layout. . Hot-key switching between Russian and English modes. . Automatic translation to the host character-set (KOI, ISO, etc). INFO-KERMIT DIGEST V21 #3 Page 11 This is in addition to the keyboard methods that were already available in earlier releases: . A Compose key for Latin-1-like character sets (for Western European languages like Italian, Portuguese, Norwegian, German, French, etc). . A Hebrew keyboard mode for Hebrew and Yiddish. THE MOUSE AND MARK MODE Copy-and-paste capability, as well as mouse-directed terminal cursor steering, were introduced in the previous release. In version 5A(191): . Text selection can now span the entire virtual screen, scrollback buffer included. . You can reassign these functions to different mouse events. . You can assign them to keys. . You can assign keyboard verbs, macros, or text to mouse events. . Copy-and-paste works consistently between C-Kermit and other apps. To get a quick idea of the power of the new "mark mode": after installing the new version, starting it up, and accumulating a bunch of screens in the rollback buffer: . Hold down the left mouse button. . Drag the mouse towards the top of screen, watch text being selected. . Now drag it PAST the top of the screen -- watch what happens. . Push the Arrow, Page Up/Down, or Home/End keys while dragging. Any text that you select this way can be copied to the PM clipboard, printed on your printer, copied to a file, or pasted directly into your terminal session. TCP/IP IMPROVEMENTS TELNET connections are about 500% faster than before. Several TELNET protocol problems were fixed, most notably the ones relating to "firewalls". Connections are now attempted to multiple IP addresses when provided by the name server, until success is achieved. TELNET NAWS (Negotiate About Window Size) capability has been added. Incoming TCP/IP connections are now accepted -- you can TELNET to OS/2 C-Kermit on a pre-arranged socket and have a "chat" session or execute Kermit server functions. OS/2 C-Kermit can now dial your Warp IAK SLIP connections for you, using a special technique to "borrow" the serial port from the SLIP driver. This gives you a lot more flexibility than you get with SLIPTERM. There are new controls for TELNET NVT/binary mode and CRLF mapping, since these areas are so problematic with the proliferation of incompatible (and often confused) TELNET servers: SET TELNET { NVT, BINARY } NEWLINE-MODE { ON, OFF, RAW } SET TELNET BINARY-MODE { ACCEPTED, REFUSED, REQUESTED } Page 12 INFO-KERMIT DIGEST V21 #3 SOCKS support added for TELNET'ing through firewalls. OS/2 C-Kermit gives you all the convenience features of a serial communications program integrated with its own internal TELNET protocol implementation. If you do a lot of TELNET'ing to diverse services, especially on non-TELNET ports, you'll begin to appreciate what this means. OTHER CHANGES ...include: . Improved context-sensitive help screens, status lines, and messages. . More key combinations are recognized for SET KEY. . System Sounds can now be used to differentiate "Information", "Warning", and "Error" events. . MOVE and MMOVE commands added = SEND and MSEND, then delete. . REMOTE RENAME and REMOTE COPY (both ends) added. . New and improved hypertext Updates documentation. . Various other new commands, bug fixes, cleanups, etc. NOTE: 5A(191) is an OS/2-only release of C-Kermit. Thanks to Jeff Altman for 99% of the work that went into this new release. DOCUMENTATION C-Kermit 5A is comprehensively and professionally documented in the book, "Using C-Kermit", supplemented by the hypertext CKERMIT.INF file, which covers recent additions up to and including edit 191. If you will be using OS/2 C-Kermit and you have not already purchased this book, please purchase it. It will answer your questions, it will show you how to get the most out of the software, and book sales are the primary source of funding for the Kermit effort. Ordering information for the book is included in the CKERMIT.INF file, which may be accessed from the C-Kermit> prompt with the UPDATES command. HOW TO GET IT OS/2 C-Kermit 5A(191) may be obtained from kermit.columbia.edu via anonymous ftp, directory kermit/archives, file cko191.zip. Transfer it in binary mode (every step of the way), unzip it on your OS/2 system into a spare directory, then run the INSTALL script. You may also order the new version on diskette from Columbia University. If you already have a copy of "Using C-Kermit", use the tear-out form in back to order the diskette only. If you don't have the book, then order the book+diskette package from us: Kermit Development and Distribution Columbia University Academic Information Systems 612 West 115th Street INFO-KERMIT DIGEST V21 #3 Page 13 New York, NY 10025-7721 USA Telephone: +1 212 854-3703 Fax: +1 212 663-8202 Domestic and overseas orders accepted. Book only: US $36.95 (US, Canada, and Mexico), US $47 elsewhere. Book + OS/2 C-Kermit: US $45.00 (US, Canada, Mexico), $55 elsewhere. Orders may be paid by MasterCard or Visa, or PREPAID by check in US dollars. Add US $35 bank fee for checks not drawn on a US bank. Price includes shipping. Do not include sales tax. Inquire about quantity discounts. Please note that C-Kermit is copyrighted software, and it may not be redistributed by commercial enterprises (including makers of CD-ROMs) without written permission of the Office of Kermit Development and Distribution, Columbia University, at the address above. ------------------------------ End of Info-Kermit Digest Page 14 Index Page 15 ANSI Terminal Emulation, 1 C-Kermit, 7 CICS Kermit, 4 Cyrillic, 1 Data General Terminal Emulation, 1 Hebrew, 1 IBM Mainframe Kermit, 4 Japanese Kanji, 1 MS-DOS Kermit 3.14, 1 MUSIC Kermit, 4 MVS/TSO Kermit, 4 OS/2 C-Kermit, 7 Recovery, File Transfer, 1, 4 VM/CMS Kermit, 4 Wyse Terminal Emulation, 1