Thanks everyone for your recommendations. I think I'll give Tiny Personal Firewall a try.
Steve On 16 Feb 2002 at 6:03, Richard Cotterell wrote: > > > Ref: monk <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>'s > message dated 14 Feb 2002, 10:01 hours. > > >It appears that this program is only for WinNT/2000, unless I am > >mistaken... > > You are not mistaken. That said, it has been stated by a few, that they have had >success > in running it on a Win 9x OS. > > However, and this is a certainty, Tiny Personal Firewall will tell you all that you >wish > to know in respect to your question. It will also, due to its inherent kindness and > thoughtfulness - after all it is freeware, allow you to block all those ports in > promiscuous mode that you may find to be enticing to a legion of hungry hackers on >the > make. :-) > > Win 9x OS's are (or is it *were*) of little interest to software developers in this > field. There is, for example, a port blocker from AnalogX, but little else. > > > > > >--- Red Wolf <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > >> > Can anyone recommend a program (preferably free) that > >> > will tell you which program is listening on an open port in > >> > windoze 95/98? > >> > >> Fport > >> http://www.foundstone.com/knowledge/free_tools.html > >> Click Intrusion Detection and Fport > >> > >> -- > >> RedWolf > >> Freeware Oracle > >> [EMAIL PROTECTED] - email > >> > >> > >> > >> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > >> > >> > >> __________________________________________________ > >> FREE voicemail, email, and fax...all in one place. > >> Sign Up Now! http://www.onebox.com > >> > > > > > >===== > >-Once you have made arrangements for everything that could possibly happen, make >them for the impo > ssible... you just never know. > > > >__________________________________________________ > >Do You Yahoo!? > >Send FREE Valentine eCards with Yahoo! Greetings! > >http://greetings.yahoo.com > > > > > -- > Richard H. Cotterell <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > > ________________________________________________________________________________ > Advice in old age is foolish; for what can be more absurd than to > increase our provisions for the road the nearer we approach to our > journey's end. > -Marcus Tullius Cicero, Roman statesman, scholar, and orator >
