Dear Colleagues: This report summarizes my explorations of functionality and accessibility in current SSH clients for Windows. As you will recall, I (and others) have strongly advised against using telnet and ftp for administration of ACB's remote web server simply because these applications are insecure. Rather, SSH is recommended because it provides the same functionality but in a manner where all of the information transmitted across the public Internet has been secured with strong data encryption. This is particularly important for usernames and passwords which allow access to system level functions on this remote server. And, such security precautions have only become more important since the events of September 11 last. Fortunately, the news for ACB is very good. I will point you to a fully accessible and fully featured ftp client with full support for ssh2--the current standard. This should take care of the need to move files back and forth very nicely. The news for command line access isn't quite as good, though it is still not bad. Herewith the details: 1.) File Transfer Agents There is really only one choice here. CuteFTP Pro 1.0 has absolutely everything ACB needs to manage files on its remote server securely. CuteFTP Pro stands head and shoulders above the competition both on accessibility and on ftp features. It is, unfortunately, not a free software program, but it is very excellent all the way around. Be sure you get CuteFTP Pro 1.0, and not the older CuteFtp 3.5 or 4.0 clients which do NOT support ssh. A free 30 day trial copy can be downloaded from GlobalScape, the manufacturer of CuteFTP Pro at: http://www.globalscape.com/download/index.shtml My second, and very viable, choice for managing these files remotely is the DOS command line utilities that are available in the SSH for Windows 32-bit operating environments client available free of charge to nonprofits at http://www.ssh.com Regretably, the Windows utilities in this package are only partially accessible. But, they are also only partly as capable as Cute FTP -- lacking such important features as "resume upload." Still, the DOS ports of the unix commands scp and sftp will work very well for anyone who still has good speech access to DOS; 2.) Terminal Access The options for a good command line on the web server are not as clear as for file management. Fortunately, though, there are very good secure substitutes for telnet, and their accessibility is probably no less than the accessibility for the various telnet clients. Let me explain: Not unlike the circumstances in available telnet clients, available ssh clients range from fully accessible clients to not so accessible ones. And, the reasons for this are substantially the same because, after the connection is made, what telnet presents onscreen is no different than what ssh presents onscreen. So, if you think that telnet is accessible on Windows, you will likely get the same level of accessibility from the SSH Client for Windows available from: http://www.ssh.com In order to get the same functionality, however, you will likely need to apply whatever set files are associated with your Windows telnet client to this SSH application. If, on the other hand, you are able to run in DOS, you will find the command line version which comes with this application vastly superior. This DOS client simply works with asap or vocal-eyes. CONCLUSIONS The Windows CuteFTP Pro 1.0 client should be used for secure remote file management; The DOS SSH2.EXE client from ssh.com should be used for secure remote terminal access; The telnet server should be removed from the web server; FTP access should be limited to anonymous access only; ADDITIONAL NOTES There is yet another SSH application available on Windows called PuTTY. While it is not as accessible, in my view, as the applications named above, it could be as accessible if a competent programmer were to fix the interface. This is possible because PuTTY is an open source application. The source code, documentation, and current executables for PuTTY can be found at: http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/ Respectfully Submitted, -- Janina Sajka, Director Technology Research and Development Governmental Relations Group American Foundation for the Blind (AFB) Email: janina at afb.net Phone: (202) 408-8175 Chair, Accessibility SIG Open Electronic Book Forum (OEBF) http://www.openebook.org Will electronic books surpass print books? Read our white paper, Surpassing Gutenberg, at http://www.afb.org/ebook.asp Download a free sample Digital Talking Book edition of Martin Luther King Jr's inspiring "I Have A Dream" speech at http://www.afb.org/mlkweb.asp Learn how to make accessible software at http://www.afb.org/accessapp.asp