telnet

listen to the pronunciation of telnet
English - Turkish
(Askeri) telekomünikasyon ağı (telecommunication network)
Telnet
telnet terminal id
Telnet Uçbirim Kimliği
Turkish - Turkish
English - English
A network protocol that enables one computer to communicate with another via the Internet; the program that acts as the client in this situation
To use such a program to make such a connection
Telnet is a utility program and protocol that allows one to connect to another computer on a network After providing a username and password to login to the remote computer, one can enter commands that will be executed as if entered directly from the remote computer's console
The standard protocol for connecting one computer to another (usually, one of these computers will be a server running Unix) Telnet allows you to connect to another computer, input commands, and run programs When you connect to your campus email from a public terminal at the University of Washington, you are usually "telnetting" to dante or homer From the "shell" of dante or homer you can telnet to any computer in the world, provided that you know the address, and can log on with a username and password
Internet standard protocol for remote login (terminal connection) service TELNET allows a user at one site to interact with a remote timesharing system at another site as if the user's terminal were connected directly to the remote computer [San Diego State University]
To communicate with another Internet host using the TELNET (RFC 854) protocol (usually using a program of the same name) Someone logged into his employer's network could, for instance, use the employer's internet gateway to telnet to an account on another system, then send messages through that system to the rest of the internet, in an attempt to hide the origin of the messages
The protocol suite for the TCP/IP Internet network which permits a terminal on one host computer to seem as if directly connected to another computer on the network Also the name of a terminal emulator program written by NCSA for using PCs on the Internet
Telnet is a protocol for remote computing on the Internet It allows a computer to act as a remote terminal on another machine, anywhere on the Internet This means that when you telnet to a particular host and port, the remote computer (which must have a telnet server) accepts input directly from your computer (which must have a telnet client) and output for your session is directed to your screen There are many library and information resources that are accessible through telnet Back to Top
A terminal emulation protocol that allows you to make a terminal connection to other computers on the Internet This requires that you run a telnet client on your computer and connect to a telnet server on the other machine
T Telnet - a protocol that allows computers connected to the Internet to connect to one another It provides a remote login and is often the way to access a library catalog through the World Wide Web
Protocol that provides terminal emulation using the TCP/IP protocols Telnet allows users to log onto and access remote computers
{i} protocol which simulates a terminal for connecting to a computer through the Internet or a telephone line (Computers)
allows a remote user to log on to the system and run console programs by using the command line A computer running the Telnet service can support connections from various TCP/IP Telnet clients, including UNIX-based and Windows-based computers If the Telnet service is stopped, remote users won't be able to connect to the computer using telnet clients
Telnet is a protocol that allows one computer to login to another Telnet applications allow your sophisticated PC or Mac to act as a "dumb" terminal on a host computer, which is often a mainframe VT100 and IBM3270 are common terminal types that your computer must emulate in order to connect to the host The host usually requires a login name and password; if it is a public site, these often appear just above the query: "name?" At Radcliffe, Macs use NCSA telnet and tn3270, and PCs use Host presentor and Wt(or tn)3270 Some Macs use VersaTerm to telnet to Development's Vax (FRIS)
A protocol used by some computer systems to log on to a remote computer
A program that enables you to open an interactive login session over TCP/IP networks like the Internet Commands you enter from your own computer are executed exactly as if you were seated at the remote machine Some computers require you have an account for access, while others function as public archives where no unique login is necessary Example: telneting to UNIX or similar computers using VT00 terminal emulation (as opposed to IBM3270 or fullscreen emulation)
One of the executable programs usually included in a TCP/IP software package This is an Internet terminal emulation service for machines other than IBM mainframe-type machines Typically, this is the terminal emulation you use to access a remote system running the Unix operating system This terminal emulation uses the ASCII standard for encoding information It manages the details of logging in to a remote computer and interacts with it as if your keyboard and monitor were directly attached to the remote computer It emulates older-style nongraphics terminals but is still valuable because it uses so few network resources and allows you to work effectively on distant machines See the VT100 definition below A separate document will also tell you more about Telnet
That part of TCP/IP suite used for remote login and terminal emulation; also the name of the program used to connect to the Internet host systems Originally a Unix utility, telnet is available now for almost all popular OSes
A program used to communicate with another computer using standard protocols  It supports the familiar character-based login to sessions on remote hosts
The TCP/IP standard protocol for remote terminal connection service Telnet allows a user at one site to interact with a remote time-sharing system at another site as if the user's terminal connected directly to the remote machine
An Internet protocol that allows a user at a remote terminal to login to other computer systems on the Internet The GATE: NEOS Library Catalogue and many other library catalogues are accessible in text-based (no mouse) format if the Internet browser has been set up to use Telnet One advantage of the Telnet text-based version of the GATE: NEOS Libraries Catalogue is that holdings can be limited to an individual library
Internet service allowing one computer to log onto another, connecting as if not remote
Telnet is a protocol that lets you log in to a remote computer and use programs and data that the remote owner has made available, just as if it were your local computer For more information and examples, see the Telnet FAQ
The command and program used to login from one Internet site to another The telnet commmand/program gets you to the "login: " prompt of another host computer
The command and program used to login from one Internet site to another The telnet command program gets you to the login: prompt of another host
Telnet is a protocol for logging on to other computers over the Internet Both computers must support the protocol They use Telnet to connect via the internet with a Telnet address
An Internet protocol that lets you connect your PC as a remote workstation to a host computer anywhere in the world and to use that computer as if you were logged on locally
telnet protocol
protocol for simulating a terminal for connecting to another computer through the Internet or a telephone line
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telnet
telnet
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