Oh, so maybe the SuperLAT driver is some black magic that MS KERMIT uses to talk to the
Windows driver - ugly but kinda cool...
Sampsa
On 27 Jan 2011, at 02:39, Jason Stevens wrote:
Otherwise, all you are going to find is in the internet wayback
machine... this stuff is as dead as disco.....
http://web.archive.org/web/19980117235914/www.meridiantc.com/PR_SLATGateway…
St. Louis, MO, December 1, 1997-
Meridian Technology Corporation announces the release of Version 2.0
of SuperLAT Gateway, a product that connects Windows NT-based networks
and Digital LAT networks.
Version 2.0 of SuperLAT Gateway is most appropriate for organizations
integrating Windows NT into a Digital LAT environment or those
eliminating their Digital VMS or UNIX systems entirely. It allows
LAT-based computers and peripheral devices to be used from an NT-based
network, as well as NT-based printers to be used from a LAT network.
New connectivity options let organizations preserve their hardware and
software investments by increasing the flexibility with which existing
computing resources may be used.
(etc etc)...
http://web.archive.org/web/19961110235243/www.meridiantc.com/SuperLAT_Win95…
SuperLAT for Windows 95 v3.0 Highlights
Connect Windows 95 users to Digital applications and peripheral devices
Capitalize on Windows 95 power
Use any 16-bit or 32-bit Windows terminal emulator
Share up to 256 printers across platforms
On Wed, Jan 26, 2011 at 7:03 PM, Sampsa Laine <sampsa at mac.com> wrote:
Gentlemen, I was playing with MS Kermit 3.15 today (don't ask), and discovered it
supports a rather amazing number of networking protocols including DECNET and something
called "SuperLAT" - anyone have any experience of connecting to a DECNET host or
LAT host with this?
Sampsa