[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > which one of these > - GPGshell > - WinPT > - GPGee > > is better for a starter with GPG
First of all, let's get some definitions down because it can become confusing. WinPT is both an application and a group of tools. The application, Windows Privacy Tray, sits in the Windows task tray and gives you a GnuPG interface from there. The group of tools is the tray application bundled along with GnuPG itself. This distinction will become important later... for now, though, when I say "WinPT" I mean the tray application, not the group of tools. Now, to answer your question: GPG Shell is an ok program but not really designed for the GnuPG beginner. What is does when you tell it to do something is start the GngPG command for you and then dump you into a command prompt with that GnuPG command running so you can finish it (answer any questions GnuPG has for you). So, if you want to edit a key, it doesn't have a GUI mechanism to do so - it drops you into the GnuPG edit key command and you have to type all the key editing commands in. For a new person, WinPT will be easier to use. It doesn't expose quite as much of the inner workings of GnuPG - there are some things you can't do with it, but what it does do is completely through a GUI. Now, as far as GPGee goes, it isn't intended as a "competitor" to WinPT, but more as a complement. WinPT is a tray application that gives you a key manager and lets you perform GPG operations on the clipboard and the current window. GPGee isn't intended to do all that. It is only a Windows explorer shell extension. It adds GnuPG commands to the windows explorer right-click context menu. So, if you want to simple sign, encrypt, or verify one or more files, GPGee makes that very easy. There is no key management in it at all, so that would be something you would do through WinPT. The reason I made the distinction between the WinPT tray application and the WinPT group of tools, is that GPGee is going to become one of the tools included in WinPT. Timo Schulz had a different shell extension (WinFPSE) that was included in the WinPT bundle, but he wants to focus more on the tray application, and I will focus on the explorer extension. Hopefully once GPGee is in the bundle things will become less confusing for the new people just looking for a good front end. Kurt.
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