A specific feature which allows authorized users of one TCP/IP system to log into another over a network & interact as if directly connected to each other.
Using the Telnet protocol to operate a remote computer over the Internet as if you were on site.
Operating a remote computer over a network as if it were a local computer. This can be accomplished via one of several protocols, including telnet and the UNIX program rlogin.
It is possible to login to a remote computer by using an application program based on TELNET - a terminal emulation protocol made for this purpose. The user can therefore enter commands on a keyboard attached to their local computer and access files etc. on a remote computer that may be located anywhere in the world. | français
A Doctor for Networks feature which allows the Central Management Station to login to a remote, managed site.
The service offered by Berkeley 4BSD Unix systems that allows users of one machine to connect to other Unix systems across an internet and interact as if their terminals connected to the machines directly. Although Rlogin offers essentially the same service as Telnet, it is superior because the software passes information about the user's environment to the remote machine.
Category of rules allowing remote users to login to server (Telnet, RLogin) or execute commands on the server (REXEC, RSH).
Operating on a remote computer, using a protocol over a computer network, as though locally attached. Commonly used protocols include telnet and rlogin. Telnet is a TC--More--P/IP protocol. The rlogin protocol is specific to Unix environments.
Refers to the capability of a network user to access databases and software on other computers, possibly computers linked on the Internet in remote parts of the globe.
The ability to operate a networked computer from a remote location, using any of several protocols.
An interactive connection from your desktop computer over a network or telephone lines to a computer in another location (remote site).
Operating on a remote computer, using a protocol over a computernetwork, as though locally attached. See also: Telnet. Remote Procedure Call (RPC)