Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!cs.utexas.edu!wuarchive!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!rpi!bu.edu!orc!inews!iwarp.intel.com!gargoyle!chinet!patrickd From: patrickd@chinet.chi.il.us (Patrick Deupree) Newsgroups: comp.windows.ms Subject: Re: Still looking... Good Win 3.0 Comm program. Message-ID: <1990Aug27.234514.6869@chinet.chi.il.us> Date: 27 Aug 90 23:45:14 GMT References: <1990Aug25.160852.25287@amd.com> Organization: The Whitewater Group, Evanston, IL Lines: 23 In article <1990Aug25.160852.25287@amd.com> indra@ashirvad.amd.com (Indra Singhal) writes: > >My local store was out of CrossTalk for Windows... I will be getting >it soon. Anyone have experience with it under Win3. Does it use the >16550? I know no auto-learn in CT. How easy is the scripting language? >How good is the vt100 emulation? I don't remember the previous message, so I may be covering a terminal program that has already been covered. I'm using DynaComm (as a matter of fact, I'm using it right now) on both a Unix machine and on CompuServe. I like it a lot. The Scripting language isn't too bad (I didn't have the manual for the script language, so I used another script and modified it for my purposes). For CompuServe it's great because it supports the Compuserve B protocol for downloading. It also happens to be one of the rare packages that supports the combios (for use with network modems). FutureSoft (the same guys that make the current Terminal) make the program and should be listed in your application reference guide if you want a #. -- "Organized fandom is composed of a bunch of nitpickers with a thing for trivial pursuit." -Harlan Ellison Patrick Deupree -> patrickd@chinet.chi.il.us