

As a general rule though, when compiling and making. However, the program does not start for me from the menu entry and when I try running from terminal the output says "Illegal instruction", so not sure what is going on exactly. I think the petget program (PPM) does apply some hacks and edits as a matter of course during installation in an attempt to maximise compatibility within Puppy. desktop file has the "%u" argument removed. I just booted a fresh frugal of BionicPup32 and installed your. To create a Menu entry, see Mike Walsh's instructions here, viewtopic.php?t=3420 and with respect to wine my posts here, and here. I ran it under wine-portable discussed on that thread. This thread would be most useful with a 32-bit system, viewtopic.php?t=103.
Syncterm for linux install#
You can also drag the binary to the desktop to create a "short-cut" -Linux name symbolic link.īut to run the win32 version, you'd have to install or SFS-Load Wine. To start either version, just file browse to it (rox has a bookmarking tool) and left-click it. root/my-applications/bin is a convenient place to keep small applications.

You can keep it anywhere and delete the rest of the folder. It consists of a 'self-contained' binary. win-portables.īut try MarisaG's version first. Left-Click that icon, then -in the window which opens- right-click an empty space and select New>Directory, and give it a name, e.g. mnt/home is the partition on which your bionic32 is located: as soon as you bootup it will have an 'x' in its desktop-icon just above the Taskbar. But if you're going to use a lot of portable Windows programs, I'd create a folder on /mnt/home. I'd move the folder to /opt or /root/my-applications/bin as this is a small program.

You can rename the folder to just 'syncterm': Right-click the folder and select "rename" from the pop-up menu. You'll need the entire win32 folder as it contains fonts and a dll. Bionicpup has Menu>Utilities>UExtract but you can just Right-Click the package and choose UExtract from the pop-up Menu. With either version, all you have to do is download the linked file and extract it. The same can't always be said of applications created under one of the many Linux operating systems. If it works under the creator's Windows it is likely to work under your Windows. There's only one Windows, but 'a thousand' different Linuxes. I'd only try the win32 version if something is lacking or there is a problem. I'd start with MarisaG's version first because it is a native linux application. This tool will allow you to create fonts for use with SyncTERM.SyncTerm - two versions.png (99.56 KiB) Viewed 220 times
Syncterm for linux serial#
Telnet, RLogin, SSH, RAW, modem, shell (*nix only) and direct serial connections.ANSI Music (through the sound card if installed).Support for IBM low and high ASCII including the face graphics (☺ and ☻) and card symbols (♥, ♦, ♣, and ♠) which so many other terms have problems with (may not work in curses mode.

Syncterm for linux full#
