PuTTY is a pretty accurate [free] VT emulator, particularly if you apply the 
non-default settings found in this Migration Specialties guide for OpenVMS and 
Tru64 Unix compatibility:
http://www.migrationspecialties.com/pdf/PuTTY_Settings.pdf

You could also select the original DEC MCS character set (which came on the 
VT200) instead of ISO-8859-1 (LATIN-1 West Europe) and get similar results. A 
few characters with the high bit set are slightly different, but they are 
pretty close.

PuTTY behaves the same on Windows or Linux. I'm running it on Windows 10 and 
Linux Mint 19.1 and see no real difference other than the out-of-band 
keystrokes (like copy/paste and menu activation).

David

-----Original Message----
From: Simh <simh-boun...@trailing-edge.com> On Behalf Of Lars Brinkhoff
Sent: Wednesday, July 1, 2020 2:09 PM
To: simh@trailing-edge.com
Subject: EXT :Re: [Simh] MAME and simh

Dan Gahlinger wrote:
> SecureCRT is available for Linux, natively!

FWIW, PuTTY too.

_______________________________________________
Simh mailing list
Simh@trailing-edge.com
http://mailman.trailing-edge.com/mailman/listinfo/simh
_______________________________________________
Simh mailing list
Simh@trailing-edge.com
http://mailman.trailing-edge.com/mailman/listinfo/simh

Reply via email to