Um this is incorrect. You can run cmd.exe which is a terminal and ssh on
windows.
-----Original Message-----
From: raspberry-vi-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <raspberry-vi-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> On
Behalf Of Mewtamer
Sent: Thursday, January 28, 2021 1:27 PM
To: raspberry-vi@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [raspberry-vi] Re: Terminal Emulators
Okay, I'll try to clarify a few things:
The terminal, also known as the console and sometimes the shell refers to
running Linux without a GUI, just with the command-line and text output. If
you're old enough to remember the DOS days, this is essentially the Linux
equivalent of running DOS without the early versions of Windows that where just
GUIs that ran on top of DOS.
A terminal emulator or terminal window is a GUI application that lets you
access the command-line from a graphical environment. To add to the confusion,
these are sometimes just called a terminal or shell, perhaps prefixed with
graphical.
Due to similar terminology and inconsistent usage, it isn't always clear when
one is talking about using the command-line on a system without a GUI and when
they're using the command-line through a graphical application.
ssh, short for secure shell, is a protocol for accessing the command-line on a
remote system. On a Linux system, you can run the ssh command to log into
another Linux machine either from the console running without a GUI or from a
terminal emulator within a GUI environment. As Microsoft doesn't give users the
option of running without a GUI and ssh only allows command-line access to the
remote system, sshing from a Windows machine requires a terminal emulator.
Fortunately, there are a few Windows applications that combine an ssh client
and terminal emulator into a single application. PuTTY is probably the most
well-known of these, but I believe TerraTerm is another example, and I suspect
there's a way to ssh from Power Shell or cmd.exe(or what ever it's called
nowadays). I haven't made heavy use of Windows since the XP days, so I can't
offer much practical help there.
And while there are dozens of terminal emulators for Linux, those really only
become a concern if you decide to log into the Pi or another Linux machine
directly, and only if you're running a GUI, and even then, it's possible to
switch between the GUI and a text-only console under Linux.
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Raspberry Pi and the Raspberry Pi logo are trademarks of the Raspberry Pi
Foundation.
This list is not affiliated to the Raspberry Pi Foundation and the views and
attitudes expressed by the subscribers to this list do not reflect those of the
Foundation.
Mike Ray, list creator, January 2013