Wyse 50 Emulation For Mac

The Wyse 50 has been discontinued.Looking for a replacement option?NOTE: End of life notice for Wyse 50 Terminals.The Wyse 50 is discontinued by Wyse and as a result, Vecmar technicians are finding it more difficult to locate Wyse 50 parts for repair and remanufacture of these units.You may want to consider upgrading to either the or the, which are both current compatible models that have the popular Wyse 50 emulationsThe Wyse 50 (WY-50) is a good looking alphanumeric ASCII display terminal designed to operate with almost any computer system. The terminal features a 132 column 14'diagonal screen in green or amber with a high-resolution character set to make it easy on the eyes. The low profile keyboard has a full alphanumeric section, thoughtfully places cursor control keys, editing keys, a numeric pad, and 16 programmable function keys. The positive feel of the sculptured keys and the 'n' key rollover feature make missed keystrokes a thing of the past. In fact the Wyse 50 (WY-50) is loaded with ergonomic features, from the full tilt and swivel display, to the two-position keyboard height adjustment.

Even setup is made easy with a 'menu-driven' soft setup mode.The Wyse 50 (WY-50) is packed with technical features. A full range of editing, communications and formatting features is provided. It even has a split screen capability and four operator selectable smooth scrolling speeds. Because the Wyse 50 (WY-50) is entirely designed and built by WYSE Technology. WYSE has a commitment to good design and quality manufacturing, and controls every step of the process from original design to final assembly.

No wonder the Wyse 50 (WY-50) has become the world's most popular ASCII terminal.Features of the Wyse 50 Terminals. The Wyse 50 (WY-50) is packed with technical features. A full range of editing, communications and formatting features is provided.

It even has a split screen capability and four operator selectable smooth scrolling speeds. Because the Wyse 50 (WY-50) is entirely designed and built by WYSE Technology.

WYSE has a commitment to good design and quality manufacturing, and controls every step of the process from original design to final assembly. No wonder the Wyse 50 (WY-50) has become the world's most popular ASCII terminal.

I use a wyse 50 connected to the Pick machine at work and also a pc whichis not connected. I am looking for a program to turn my pc into a dumbwyse 50 terminal. Viaduct is very good but too expensive for my simpleneeds. No file transfer reqd.There is a program wyse50.zip available from some ftp sites but it wantsto use comm1. Program must be recompiled to use comm4 and when I do thismy pc crashes. I've tried several assemblers with the same result.Can anyone help? ThanksDavidPickage15.05.95 00:00.

CRT v.5.5 CRT is a rock-solid terminal emulator with advanced session management, a multi-session tabbed interface, scripting, and numerous emulations.CRT supports SOCKS and generic firewalls, transparent printing, Xmodem/Zmodem, ActiveX, and Windows TAPI. WiseTerm Telnet/Serial (32-bit) v.3.1.10 Win32 emulation of Wyse 50/50+/60 terminals. Part of the WiseTerm suite of telnet/serial emulators.

In article, Pickage wrote:Have you tried wIntegrate yet? The cost is only $195 from Pick Systems.Please contact Pick Systems at 714/261-7425.Not being PCentric myself, but doesn't ProComm+ have a pretty good set ofemulations available? I think that it has Wyse 50, but not sure, since Idon't have a copy handy. Also, seem to recall it is not too expensive.That is, if all your looking for is a dumb emulator and not a fancyGUI-izer like the above and other products I'm sure you'll hear about.-Jeffrey W. Janner 'There's no good idea that's so good you can't ruin it with a few well-placed idiots.'

- Scott Adams Karl B. Carapellotti15.05.95 00:00. Not being PCentric myself, but doesn't ProComm+ have a pretty good set ofemulations available?

I think that it has Wyse 50, but not sure, since Idon't have a copy handy. Also, seem to recall it is not too expensive.That is, if all your looking for is a dumb emulator and not a fancyGUI-izer like the above and other products I'm sure you'll hear about.-Jeffrey W. Janner 'There's no good idea that's so good you can't ruin it with a few well-placed idiots.' - Scott Adams -Yes, Procomm+ (both DOS & Windows) have W50 emulators, so does BitComm(another 'gimmee' with some modems), and almost ANY of the 'PICK-oriented'comm packages so (i.e VIADUCT, ACCUTERM, TERMITE, CROWTERM) and many others.And even if the comm package doesn't have W50, you'd have to be using a realnasty version of PICK to NOT be able to match SOME terminal emulation betweenthe 'term' statement and a comm package.chd.@state.systems.sa.gov.au16.05.95 00:00.

In article, (David Alexander) writes: I use a wyse 50 connected to the Pick machine at work and also a pc which is not connected. I am looking for a program to turn my pc into a dumb wyse 50 terminal. Viaduct is very good but too expensive for my simple needs. No file transfer reqd. There is a program wyse50.zip available from some ftp sites but it wants to use comm1. Program must be recompiled to use comm4 and when I do this my pc crashes. I've tried several assemblers with the same result.

Can anyone help? Does it have to be W50? Pick supports many terminal types.

Youmay have the verb DEFINE-TERMINAL which gives you a number to choose from. UseTERM-TYPE to define your line / port to one of them. To connect a personalcomputer I would look at one of the ANSI and VT100 term types which you shouldeasily find an emulator for. The terminal applet in MS-Windows canemulate VT100.- Michael Talbot-WilsonRich Ahrens16.05.95 00:00. Danny wrote:: I have used Procomm Plus since 85.

I have connected to just about all: there is when it comes to PICK. I have used both the DOS and WINDOWS: versions.

Both work, but I have stayed with the DOS version seeing: that PICK is texted based. You can buy Procomm for under $80In fact, the ADDS emulation was specifically tweaked to work with Pick.To be precise, my McD Sequel applications - ProComm hails from astudent project at the U of Mo, and I was running a number of Picksystems for the university's extension service and needed a terminalemulator for users who were switching to PCs. So I gave the boys a call,Bruce came over and borrowed a reference card for our Viewpoints, wentback and fiddled with code, and came back and tested at my desk.

So forsome time it supported our apps just fine, but we only used a subset ofthe Viewpoint features and it had to be improved over the years as itgrew to widespread popularity.BTW, DataStorm was known as PIL, Ltd, in those days. It stood forProgrammers in Leather.And just to tie together several thread of local interest, one of thefounders used some of his many, many bucks earned from ProComm to buildan operate a very nice brewpub in Columbia, the Flat Branch. Good foodand good beer.-Rich Ahrens ,-Danny16.05.95 00:00. I have used Procomm Plus since 85. I have connected to just about allthere is when it comes to PICK. I have used both the DOS and WINDOWSversions. X force adobe cs6 master collection keygen.

Both work, but I have stayed with the DOS version seeingthat PICK is texted based. You can buy Procomm for under $80Regards,Dan GallI use a wyse 50 connected to the Pick machine at work and also a pc whichis not connected. I am looking for a program to turn my pc into a dumbwyse 50 terminal. Viaduct is very good but too expensive for my simpleneeds. No file transfer reqd.owen.@gold.tc.umn.edu16.05.95 00:00. Yah, I have used Procomm in it's several incarnations as well and find itto be an excellent package. I recently purchased the Windows version ofProcomm plus and am happy with it's performance.

Wyse 50 Emulation For Mac

I must have five or sixcommunications packages lying around, admittedly the others were bundledwith one piece of hardware or another, but Procomm is the only one I use. Micheal H. Owens 'Let the random Icons attack'Yes, that's really how I spell it' in a blur of symbolic frenzy'.Raj Rijhwani16.05.95 00:00. (Danny) wrote:I have used Procomm Plus since 85. I have connected to just about allthere is when it comes to PICK.The one fixable problem with Procomm is that you have to change thekeyboard mapping in order to be able to enter AM, VM, SVM charactersby hitting familiar keys.

Changing the mapping seems daunting to someincluding myself. I had som eincomplete instructions about doing it.I never did get an AM out of ctrl-shift-6, vm out of ctrl- and svmout of ctrl-/. Most users will not need these keys but I think themajority of programmers end up typing AMs VMs and SMs.Most common use of AM is in the editor to insert blank lines 4,5 and 6in dictionary items.Most common uses of VM are data repair and correlatives with multipleconversions.Only rarely do I need an SVM and that is usually data repair.Regards,Dan GallRegards,TomEvergreen Financial Systems, Inc'Never trust a computer with a big reset button!'