Describe Telnet clients and where they are used.
What will be an ideal response?
Similar to an FTP client, Telnet was designed to run on dumb terminals connected to a mainframe computer. On a modern Windows computer system, a Telnet client is provided when the TCP/IP protocol suite is installed. The built-in Telnet client is a Command Prompt-based program that can be run directly from the Command Prompt or through the Run option on the Start menu. On a Linux computer system, Telnet can be run from a Terminal session. Figure 13-33 shows both a Windows and a Linux computer system running Telnet. Both Windows and Linux are displaying the available program help information which is displayed when a ‘?' is entered as the command. If Telnet is installed on your computer system, it can be run from the command prompt. If Telnet is not installed, it can be added using the control panel "Add/Remove Programs" option in many of the older versions of Windows or the "Program and Features" option in Windows Vista.
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Match the following terms with their description
I. Client II. Enterprise server III. Supercomputer IV. Grid computing V. Screensaver A. Connects to, or requests services from, another computer B. Can allow thousands of simultaneous users C. Performs complex mathematical calculations D. Distributed computing using a few computers in one location E. A moving image that appears when the computer has been idle
Photographers and artists use the rule of thirds to showcase the element in the foreground above all others.
Answer the following statement true (T) or false (F)
In the figure above, the number 1 refers to the list arrow used to set the anti-aliasing method.
Answer the following statement true (T) or false (F)
A Diffie-Hellman key exchange that uses different keys
What will be an ideal response?