Telnet - Telnet Clients

Telnet Clients

  • PuTTY is a free, open-source SSH, Telnet, rlogin, and raw TCP client for Windows, Linux, and Unix.
  • AbsoluteTelnet is a telnet client for Windows. It also supports SSH and SFTP,
  • Host Explorer part of Hummingbird Connectivity; it implements the telnet, TN 3270, 5250, Ansi, and other protocols.
  • RUMBA (Terminal Emulator)
  • Line Mode Browser, a command line web browser
  • NCSA Telnet
  • TeraTerm
  • Passport from Zephyr Corp, available as both regular executables and a web-based SSH/Telnet application
  • SecureCRT from Van Dyke Software
  • TeSSH from Zugg Software for Windows based upon the zMUD and CMUD code base also supports SSH and SFTP
  • TN3270 Plus from SDI USA, Inc. available for Windows and supports terminal emulation types TN3270, TN5250, VT100 and VT220. It also supports SSH, TLS and SSL.
  • ZOC Terminal
  • SyncTERM BBS terminal program supporting Telnet, SSHv2, RLogin, Serial, Windows, *nix, and Mac OS X platforms, X/Y/ZMODEM and various BBS terminal emulations
  • PCMan and KKMan are often used by Telnet user in Taiwan (Republic of China), where Telnet BBS are still popular.
  • PowerTerm InterConnect from Ericom available for Windows, Mac OS X, Linux, Windows CE and supports 35 terminal emulation types including TN3270, TN5250, VT420, Wyse and others with SSH and SSL.
  • Rtelnet is a SOCKS client version of Telnet, providing similar functionality of telnet to those hosts which are behind firewall and NAT.
  • Xshell is a terminal emulator that supports SSH, SFTP (SSH File Transfer Protocol), Telnet, rlogin and SERIAL from NetSarang.

Read more about this topic:  Telnet

Famous quotes containing the word clients:

    ...a lot of my people are models. I like that for them. I admire models, so I think that’s right for my people. ...I love it when I have an important [client]. And the pictures and awards. One of my clients has these television awards—a beautiful statue of a woman. I think it’s an Emmy. People would be lucky to get one. She has two. I think that’s great.
    Elaine Strong (b. 1934)