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Comms and terminal emulator DOS software From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Qmodem was an MS-DOS shareware telecommunications program and terminal emulator. Qmodem was widely used to access bulletin boards in the 1980s and was well respected in the Bulletin Board System (BBS) community. Qmodem was also known as Qmodem SST and Qmodem Pro.
Original author(s) | John Friel III[1] |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Mustang Software |
Initial release | 1984 |
Operating system | MS-DOS |
Type | telecommunications program, terminal emulator |
License | shareware |
Qmodem was developed by John Friel III in 1984 and sold as shareware through a company called The Forbin Project. Qmodem gained in popularity very quickly because it was much faster and had many new features compared to PC-Talk, the dominant shareware IBM PC communications program of that time.[1]
Originally developed in Borland Turbo Pascal, the application originally supported the XMODEM protocol, gradually added support for other protocols such as the popular ZMODEM protocol and CompuServe-specific protocols such as CIS-B and CIS-B+. Qmodem evolved to include features such as the ability to host a simple Bulletin Board System. The application was sold to Mustang Software in 1991 and in 1992 version 5 of the program was released.[2][3]
It is a successor of Qmodem, by Mustang Software, Inc. Several versions had been released for MS-DOS and for Microsoft Windows with the final version being QmodemPro 2.1 for Windows 95 and Windows NT which was released July 7, 1997.[4]
QmodemPro continued to be sold by Mustang Software through 2000 when the rights to it were purchased by Quintus Corporation.[5]
Qmodem was available as shareware software for MS-DOS operating systems.
Qmodem supported the following file transfer protocols:[8]
Qmodem Pro was available as paid commercial software for MS-DOS operating systems, then later for Windows operating systems.
An independent free software re-implementation of Qmodem for Unix-like systems called Qodem[9] started development in 2003. Qodem is in active development and has features common to modern communications programs, such as Unicode display, and support for the telnet and ssh network protocols.[10] It has also been ported to Microsoft Windows, and compatible with Windows 95 and later versions of Windows.[11] It can be compiled with Borland C++ 5.02 or Microsoft Visual C++ 6.0.
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