Monday, 26 August 2013

What is TELNET? What Does TELNET Do?

What is TELNET? What Does TELNET Do?

A terminal emulation program for TCP/IP networks such as the Internet.Telnet is an old computer protocol (set of programmatic rules). Telnet is famous for being the original Internet when the Net first launched in 1969. Telnet stands for 'telecommunications network' and was built to be form of remote control to manage mainframe computers from distant terminals. In those original days of large mainframe computers Telnet enabled research students and professors to 'log in' to the university mainframe from any terminal in the building. This remote log in saved researchers hours of walking each semester. While telnet pales in comparison to modern networking technology it was revolutionary in 1969 and Telnet helped pave the way for the eventual World Wide Web in 1989. While telnet technology is very old it is still in some use today by purists. Telnet has evolved into a new modern version of remote control called 'SSH'(Secure Shell Network Protocol) something that many modern network administrators use today to manage Linux and Unix computers from a distance.Telnet is a text-based computer protocol. Unlike Firefox or Google Chrome screens.Telnet screens are very dull to look at. Very different from Web pages that sport fancy images, animation and hyperlinks. Telnet is about typing on a keyboard. Telnet commands can be rather cryptic commands with example commands being 'z' and 'prompt% fg'. Most modern users would find Telnet screens to be very archaic and slow.


































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