[Coco] Internet via Coco

Sean badfrog at gmail.com
Tue Jul 13 14:54:47 EDT 2010


One could always telnet to a linux/unix machine, and then use the Lynx
text only browser.

(But probably not what the original poster wanted)


On Mon, Jul 12, 2010 at 8:11 PM, Aaron Wolfe <aawolfe at gmail.com> wrote:

> On Mon, Jul 12, 2010 at 8:58 PM, Diego Barizo <diegoba at adinet.com.uy> wrote:

>> CW Gordon wrote:

>>>

>>> Please excuse me if I'm asking a question that has been asked before, but

>>> is

>>> it possible to browse the internet with the Coco, and if so, can I connect

>>> the RS-232 Pak to a cable modem to accomplish this?

>>>

>>>

>>

>> I don't see any answers (I might have deleted them), so I'll jump in.

>> No, you can not connect a RS-232 pack to a modern modem and browse the web.

>> The only practical way to do it, is using a PC as a tool, with either

>> Drivewire or CoCoNet.

>>

>

> It's worth clarifying that neither DW or Coconet will allow one to

> "browse the internet".  DW provides telnet, smtp, a web *server* (not

> a browser), direct TCP access for outbound and incoming connections,

> and virtual modems over TCP.  A couple IRC clients are in the works

> but not ready at this point, and I've got a twitter client I keep

> meaning to finish.  Both CocoNet and DW also provide a mechanism for

> downloading content from URLs, but this is only a way to retrieve some

> bytes.  Quite useful for mounting remote disk images or pulling files

> across the network onto a local disk, but we are talking about

> transferring bytes, not rendering their contents.

>

> While it would certainly be possible to write a web browser using

> DriveWire's TCP mechanisms, simply getting the content to the coco is

> trivial compared to rendering it in any meaningful way.  I am not

> aware of any projects attempting to do this, and not sure it would

> ever make sense anyway.  Considering the limitations of the CoCo's

> graphics modes and memory space, implementing a web browser might be a

> fun project but it's never going to be something you'd really want to

> use :)  On the other hand, things like telnet, ftp, IRC, etc can be

> done quite well on the CoCo.  The IRC clients I've seen in development

> look like first class applications that are every bit as usable as

> modern clients on modern PCs.

>

> -Aaron

>

>

>> Diego

>>

>>

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>>

>

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