On Thursday 10 May 2007 12:16, Randall R Schulz wrote:
> Hi,
>
> <http://www.linux-mag.com/id/3214/>:
>
> "UniTTY
>
> "Like all Linux users, you probably have certain tools you rely on to
> get your job done. For example, if you’re a system administrator, a
> web developer, or a hacker, a good SSH client is a must. Add to that
> a nice, graphical SFTP client and a VNC client and you can do almost
> anything. What about a secure VNC client — VNC tunneled through SSH?
> The latter would be great, but it’s a pain to set up, right?
>
> ..."

The product's page is 
<http://www.3sp.com/products/applications/unitty/unitty.jsp>.

I decided to give this a try, just for kicks (I'm not looking for any 
new terminal emulators). It's proprietary, closed-source software, but 
it is free to use for sites with 25 or fewer users. It's written in 
Java, so requires a JVM (Java Virtual Machine) installed.

It seems to be quite featureful, though I only tried using SSH terminal 
emulation. It has such poor scrolling speed that I can't see anyone 
being able to tolerate using it, especially with a large window size 
(scrolling slows down markedly as the virtual size increases).

There are some anomalous, though non-fatal behaviors. E.g., when 
connecting (at least using keyboard interactive authentication), 
there's a small, blank alert box displayed after you enter your 
password. If you confirm it, login proceeds normally and you get the 
SSH session you wanted.

There are installers for Linux, Mac OS X and Windows, so at least you 
could have a terminal emulator that's familiar on all three major 
platforms.

But unless they improve the scrolling behavior (and I've seen lots of 
Java applications do far better than this, so probably it's a naive 
implementation that they could improve), I don't see it being useful, 
at least as an ordinary terminal emulator.


Randall Schulz
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