On Tue, Apr 29, 2008 at 12:53 PM, Sitaram Chamarty <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:

> Thanks for your response.
>
> > Depending on your tolerance for using seemingly arcane utilities,
> setting up
> > an SSH server on Windows might be slightly intimidating, or not that
> bad,
>
> > http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/<http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/%7Esgtatham/putty/>
> >  I found that this guide
> [snip]
> > http://github.com/guides/providing-your-ssh-key
>
> I'm afraid, to my limited understanding, both of those URLs talk about
> ssh clients not servers.  Please tell me if I'm wrong.


You're right -- they're more about clients, not servers. But that's half the
battle, no?  ;)

I haven't done the SSH server on Windows. I think I should and report back
when I have something a little more informative.

>
>
> > I have to say that the boys (and girls?) on Msysgit have done a fine job
> > recent versions of the installer. The past few builds I've been able to
> > point-and-click install on a few machines painlessly.
>
> True, but I need some easy, painless, way of pulling from Windows
> developers repos.  At the moment, it's doable but I have to experiment
> some more -- compare to the Linux experience, this is quite lacking.
> (I'm sort of in a minority so I get to do all this investigation :-(
>
> > Perhaps you *could* just use Github. There are other public, private,
> free,
> > and commercial Git hosting services cropping up all over now. I have no
>
> This is inside a firewall.  A somewhat restrictive one :-(
>
> Regards,
>
> Sitaram
>

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