- Original Message -
From: "Anthony E . Greene" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, January 08, 2001 8:10 PM
Subject: RE: Suggestions for school
The most recent version of PuTTY supports SSH2. PuTTY is a single
executable
and it's not too big. Putt
On Thu, 1 Feb 2001, Richard Critz wrote:
- Original Message -
From: "Anthony E . Greene" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, January 08, 2001 8:10 PM
Subject: RE: Suggestions for school
The most recent version of PuTTY supports SSH2. PuTTY i
Hi all,
Our parish school has 24 computers in their computer room and maybe 20
computers in the teachers
classrooms most of which are networked together. Right
now they don't have any servers, and I my understanding
is they are not connected to the internet. From what my
5th grader tells me they
Reply in parts - see below
-Original Message-
From: linda hanigan [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, January 08, 2001 3:53 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Suggestions for school
Hi all,
Our parish school has 24 computers in their computer room and maybe 20
At 04:10 PM 1/8/2001 -0500, you wrote:
Reply in parts - see below
-Original Message-
From: linda hanigan [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, January 08, 2001 3:53 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Suggestions for school
Hi all,
Our parish school has 24 computers
On Mon, 08 Jan 2001 15:52:53 linda hanigan wrote:
Hi all,
Our parish school has 24 computers in their computer room and maybe 20
computers in the teachers
classrooms most of which are networked together. Right
now they don't have any servers, and I my understanding
is they are not connected to
On Mon, 08 Jan 2001 17:19:00 Jonathan Wilson wrote:
Sssh is great however I belive TerraTerm isn't free. use putty instead for
now (it's free) it only does ssh 1 though atm.
The most recent version of PuTTY supports SSH2. PuTTY is a single executable
and it's not too big. Putting a copy on each
using samba to map the network drive to the user, each kid could have
his/her own directory with his htmlk files there, they would
be accessible
from the main web page with just a link pointing them to the right place.
SAMBA by default will give each student a home directory that is a
On Mon, 08 Jan 2001 20:19:58 Chad W. Skinner wrote:
using samba to map the network drive to the user, each kid could have
his/her own directory with his htmlk files there, they would
be accessible
from the main web page with just a link pointing them to the right
place.
SAMBA by default