I've found that the usefulness of CTTY is usually limited to batch files where I want to hide the annoying output of some programs as they are loading:
CTTY NUL {load things here that I don't want to see the output of} CTTY CON Make sure you don't forget the CTTY CON at the end, or you won't be able to control the computer any more. There are/were several commercial "remote control" programs that allowed you to completely control a DOS computer remotely over a serial connection (LapLink, Carbon Copy, CO/Session, possibly others). With these programs, you could run almost any program remotely, even those that put the screen into extended graphics modes. You might be able to get hold of an old version of these for next to nothing on E-Bay or similar. I also remember an old PC Magazine program called PCREMOTE. It was free and even included the source code. Several years ago, of course, PC Magazine stopped letting anyone download their free DOS programs any more, but you can probably still get hold of PCREMOTE if you're interested. PCREMOTE had some limitations that the commercial programs didn't (IIRC, 9600 bps max speed, only 25x80 text screen modes, no mouse control, not all possible keystroke combinations could be transferred, possibly others). It did work well in many situations, though -- I found it much more useful than CTTY. There may also be some other free/shareware remote control programs out there that are more sophisticated than PCREMOTE, though I'm not personally aware of any. Bret ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Colocation vs. Managed Hosting A question and answer guide to determining the best fit for your organization - today and in the future. http://p.sf.net/sfu/internap-sfd2d _______________________________________________ Freedos-user mailing list Freedos-user@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/freedos-user