On Tue, Sep 07, 2010 at 22:19:17PM -0400, Leslie Fairall wrote: > Yes, I want access to shellworld.net while I'm traveling so that I check So it's shellworld's server, not yours. OK. > email on the road. I've broached the subject of installing CGI telnet with CGI programs are naturally a possible security exposure for the server. It's understandable that the server owner may decline to install such things. OK. > the administrator. I don't think he understands why you just can't type > telnet://shellworld.net in the address bar of your browser. (I don't > either, I just know it won't work on the Pac Mate). The Pac Mate runs When you instruct your web browser to use a URL starting with "telnet://", you're merely telling it to pass control to a telnet client that's already installed and ready-to-run on your computer (where you and your web browser are, not where the destination server is). Of course, if you don't already have one installed, nothing happens. Also, since the telnet client is a completely separate program, there's no added utility to run it from a web browser anyway (as opposed to just running it as a separate program). > under Windows Mobile 6. It has a Braille keyboard and Braille display > attached. Hope this helps. It seems to me that your best bet would be pocketputty (free), as has already been suggested. A google search of "windows mobile telnet client" brings up a few more suggestions, including some cheap-ish products at www.cam.com. Is there a reason why pocketputty does not work in your situation? Finally, shellworld appears to support both POP3 and IMAP e-mail access. What e-mail client do you prefer to use when logged in to shellworld? There may be a Windows Mobile POP3 or IMAP e-mail client that would suit you just as well. _______________________________________________ Blinux-list mailing list Blinux-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/blinux-list