I personally like the Gorden Chaffee's command line version the most.  The 
reason being is that it doesn't freeze
on me when I use the X-Server.   On the other hand the TTSSH version of SSH 
is better when used with pine or the vi editor since it is easier to see 
the info., and since it also has built in File Transfer capabilities.  It 
allows a user to simply type on the terminal "kermit -r"          and then 
using a graphical menu choose which files are to be transferred.  The nice 
thing is that everything gets encrypted.  I would not use the commercial 
version SSH2 since it will expire, then you have to buy it.
The ones above are free.

-----Original Message-----
From:   Keith Smith [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent:   Sunday, April 09, 2000 12:32 PM
To:     [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject:        Recommendations for Windows SSH clients

Hi:

Does anyone have any recommendations for Windows 95/98 SSH client software?
There seems to be a few listed in the FAQ.

Cedomir Igaly's SSH1 Windows 16 and 32 bit clients -
http://www.doc.ic.ac.uk/~ci2/ssh/
Robert O'Callahan's TTSSH, SSH1 extension to TeraTerm client -
http://www.zip.com.au/~roca/ttssh.html
Gorden Chaffee's command line port of ssh1 and scp1 -
http://bmrc.berkeley.edu/people/chaffee/winntutil.html
Sergey Okhapkin's SSH1 and SSH2 servers and clients port to 32-bit Windows 
-
http://www.lexa.ru/sos/
PuTTY, Simon Tatham's 32-bit Windows SSH1 client -
http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty.html
FiSSH, Mass Confusion's 32-bit SSH1 client for Windows -
http://www.massconfusion.com/ssh/
Cynus Win32 port of SSH 1.2.2 by Raju Mathur -
http://reality.sgi.com/raju/software.html
PenguiNet SSH and Telnet client - http://www.siliconcircus.com/penguinet

Keith

Reply via email to