Most recent update: 3 December 2002
At first most of these links are to the separate items from the original FAQ, but since some of these are rather dated, they are being replaced as time permits.
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Here's a quick overview:
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ftp://kermit.columbia.edu/kermit/
But that's OK since almost all access nowadays is through our website:
http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/
which provides quick access to our most popular items, such as:
But there are lots more, some of them dating back a decade or two. A concise (but long) list is here:
http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/aavsys.txt
The list is sorted by the contents of the "Machine" column. "Prefix" refers to the filename prefix, "Tape" refers to the subdirectory of the Kermit FTP site. Here's an example:
Prefix, Operating Program Program Released Tape Machine System Language Version yy/mm/dd Contributor MU D Honeywell MULTICS PL/I 2.0h 84/09/20 Oakland U
Kermit 2.0h for Honeywell MULTICS, written in PL/I at Oakland University, released 20 September 1984, is in the kermit/d directory of the FTP site, with filename prefix "mu". Even though the Prefix and Tape designators are listed in uppercase, you must enter them in lowercase because the FTP (and Web) site is now Unix-based. So to get the MULTICS version of Kermit, you would use FTP something like this:
$ mkdir multics (create a directory and cd to it) $ cd multics $ ftp kermit.columbia.edu (make the FTP connection) Name: anonymous (log in as user 'anonymous') Password: myuserid@host.domain (supply your actual email address) ftp> cd kermit/d (change directory to kermit/d) ftp> prompt (allow multiple files) ftp> ascii (transfer in ascii text mode) ftp> mget mu* (get all files whose names start with mu) ftp> bye (log off the FTP server) $
For detailed instructions about FTP, CLICK HERE. To find out how to use Kermit itself, instead of FTP, to download from the Kermit site, CLICK HERE.
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Licensing is a hot and contentious topic. The public increasingly expects software to be "free" (with various and differing interpretations of the word free), and yet software is the product of human labor, which ultimately must be paid for, particularly if it takes place full-time over a span of decades.
The Kermit Project is composed of a core of full-time computing professionals at Columbia University in New York City, plus volunteers at other locations. Although the University paid for the Kermit Project initially, funding was withdrawn in the mid-1980s, and since then we have been funded solely by the revenue we can generate through sales of books, software licenses, and support contracts.
With the exception of Kermit 95, which must be bought and paid for, Kermit software is free in the sense that you can get it for free -- including the source code -- by downloading it; you can use it for free (even within a commercial setting); and you can even get e-mail technical support for free (within reason).
However, this freedom does not extend to redistribution of the software in a commercial setting: furnishing it to customers or clients, bundling it with products, and so on. If you want to gain commercial advantage from our work, you must help to support our work by licensing the software for redistribution. The specific terms and conditions depend on the product and other factors, and are given on our licensing page. This policy is fair and makes perfect sense: if your product depends on our products, it is in your best interest to keep our product alive and strong.
A recent exception to this policy allows inclusion of C-Kermit with free (in the Open Source sense) operating-system distributions such as Linux and FreeBSD. See the C-Kermit License for details.
Another exception is G-Kermit, which is released under the GNU Public License.
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NOTE: "UNIX" is a general term covering the many operating systems that descended from the original Bell Labs UNIX operating system. Examples include: Linux, FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD, Solaris, SunOS, AIX, HP-UX, IRIX, OPENSTEP, NeXTSTEP, System V, Tru64, OSF/1, DG/UX, Unixware, Xenix, OpenServer, BSDI/OS, Ultrix, Digital UNIX, SINIX, and many more (for a longer list, CLICK HERE).
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