Final Builds Site - PuTTY
Nederlandstalige versie, Main, Sitemap, News, Downloads, Frequently Asked Questions and Answers, K-Lite Mega Codec Pack, K-Lite Codec Pack, K-Lite MPEG Pack, K-Lite Video Conversion Pack, K-Lite Codec Tweak Tool, MOV Download Tool, QT Lite, QuickTime Alternative, QuickTime MPEG-2 Plugin, Real Alternative, Windows Media Lite, BSplayer, VideoLAN, TMPGEnc, RAD Game Tools Splitter, CoreAVC, Indeo Codecs, FlacDrop, LAME MP3 Encoder, LameDropXPd, OggDropXPd, WavPackDrop, Voxware Audio, Speex DirectShow Filter, Dirac DirectShow Filter, PMP Splitter, DirectVobSub, Morgan Switcher, DivX, Xvid, MediaInfo Lite, jv16 PowerTools 2008, RegSupreme Pro, RegSupreme, TreeSize Professional, Nero CD-DVD Speed, Nero DiscSpeed, eMule, 3DMark 2005, 3DMark 2006, Internet Explorer Collection, Malware Killer, McAfee VirusScan, NOD32 Antivirus, WinRAR, WinAce, WinZip, DirectX, Tweak UI, IrfanView, Winamp, Ad-Aware 2008, Spybot Search & Destroy, Spyware Doctor, Skype, PuTTY, KeePass Password Safe, Mozilla Firefox, Mozilla Thunderbird, Adobe Reader, Flash Player, Java Runtime Environment, Microsoft Update. PuTTYPuTTY 0.60 (444 kB, 454.656 bytes)
MD5 Hash: 9bb6826905965c13be1c84cc0ff83f42
Release Date: Sunday, April 29, 2007
Release Notes:
PuTTY is a free SSH, Telnet and Rlogin client for 32-bit Windows systems. SSH, Telnet and Rlogin are three ways of doing the same thing: logging in to a multi-user computer from another computer, over a network. Multi-user operating systems, such as Unix and VMS, usually present a command-line interface to the user, much like the Command Prompt or MS-DOS Prompt in Windows. The system prints a prompt, and you type commands which the system will obey. Using this type of interface, there is no need for you to be sitting at the same machine you are typing commands to. The commands and responses, can be sent over a network, so you can sit at one computer and give commands to another one, or even to more than one. SSH, Telnet and Rlogin are network protocols that allow you to do this. On the computer you sit at, you run a client, which makes a network connection to the other computer (the server). The network connection carries your keystrokes and commands from the client to the server and carries the server's responses back to you. These protocols can also be used for other types of keyboard-based interactive session. In particular, there are a lot of bulletin boards, talker systems and MUDs (Multi-User Dungeons) which support access using Telnet. There are even a few that support SSH.

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