Picocom is a minimal dumb-terminal emulation program. It is, in principle, very much like minicom, only it's "pico" instead of "mini"!
It was designed to serve as a simple, manual, modem configuration, testing, and debugging tool. It has also served (quite well) as a low-tech serial
... [More] communications program to allow access to all types of devices that provide serial consoles. It could also prove useful in many other similar tasks.
It is ideal for embedded systems since its memory footprint is minimal (approximately 30K, when stripped). [Less]
tn5250 emulates a 5250 terminal or printer over telnet, for connecting to IBM iSeries and AS/400 computers running i5/OS and OS/400. It runs on any Unix or Windows system.
Lanterna (or "lantern") is a Java library allowing you to write easy semi-graphical user interfaces in a text-only environment, very similar to curses. Lanterna is supporting xterm compatible terminals and terminal emulators such as konsole, gnome-terminal, putty, xterm and many more. One of the
... [More] main benefits of lantern is that it's not dependent on any native library but runs 100% in pure Java.
Also, when running Lanterna on computers with a graphical environment (such as Windows or Xorg), a terminal emulator written in Swing will be used rather than standard output. This way, you can develop as usual from your IDE (most of them doesn't support ANSI control characters in their output window) and then deploy to your headless server without changing anything. [Less]
Serial-IO is a simple program to send and receive data from a serial interface. The GUI is designed like a chat window with a transmitter/receiver field and a command line to send characters and integer values.
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