About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 32. Chapters: Console application, Free terminal emulators, Kermit, Delrina, Openkore, GNOME Terminal, PuTTY, Host Explorer, ZOC, Datastorm Technologies, Inc., SecureCRT, Alpine, Terminator, Xterm, Mutt, List of terminal emulators, Tera Term, TtyEmulator, ZTerm, Qmodem, Minicom, Rxvt, Mintty, Comparison of terminal emulators, PenguiNet, Red Ryder, AbsoluteTelnet, Hilgraeve, NCSA Telnet, Konsole, Terminate, Rxvt-unicode, Qodem, Commo, Yakuake, MacTerminal, HyperACCESS, NComm, Mrxvt, Vttest, Telix, Tilda, Guake, WinComm, Mailx, Apple Terminal, Evilvte, 3270 emulator, Wterm, Gtkterm, Aterm, AlphaCom, MacWise, Indigo Terminal Emulator, RealTerm. Excerpt: Delrina was a Canadian software company founded in Toronto in 1988 and acquired by the American software firm Symantec in 1995. Delrina's business strategy was to "establish technical and market leadership in niche markets," which it accomplished with its electronic form and PC-based fax software. Delrina's electronic form products included PerForm and FormFlow, but it was best-known for its WinFax software package. WinFax enabled computers equipped with fax-modems to transmit faxes to standalone fax machines or other similarly equipped computers. Delrina also produced a set of popular screensavers, including one that resulted in a well-publicized lawsuit for copyright and trademark infringement (Berkeley Systems Inc. v. Delrina). The case set a precedent in American law whereby satiric commercial software products are not subject to the same First Amendment exemptions as parodic cartoons or literature. The firm grew steadily over the course of the early 1990s, with revenues from WinFax amounting to 80% of the company's revenues. It attempted to diversify into other areas such with online communications software with its WinComm product and produced a Web browser called Cyberjack tha...