Hi Joey

Do you mind kindly elaborating on your process to do this?

With your recommendation I got myself issh but I have nothing to connect to.

How do I go about setting up jconsole to act as a server. I'm using a
windows platform if it makes any difference.

Is there any additional software that is required?

You mentioned that the font is extremely small, as I'm still learning
J, I don't deal with very large data so hopefully it won't be an issue
for me.

On 9/1/08, Joey K Tuttle <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I meant to add to my remarks that this whole project took less than
> half an hour when I became bored with the conversation in a coffee
> shop... So the $5 application was selected, downloaded, configured
> (for 3 systems), and used with minimal effort.
>
> In landscape, the tiny font only displays 80 columns, but line wrap
> is handled very nicely so longer lines work out OK. Also, the
> terminal (VT100 including vi support) has a buffer to remember a few
> screens of the session. That coupled with .jhistory makes it easy to
> develop (fix bugs in) a line of j.
>
> I think Eric's point about a personal web server is very good too,
> and easy to do in the same environment that provides jconsole - well,
> most such places... One of my jconsole systems is in a shell account
> on a machine provided by my DSL supplier - I don't have permission to
> configure a web server there, but jconsole is very handy.
>
> If anyone is interested, the application I bought is from
>
>    http://www.zinger-soft.com/
>
> and is published through iTunes. The author maintains a Google
> discussion group which may have some good discussions (although I
> haven't yet explored them...)
>
> - joey
>
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>
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