Comment by Zenst

8 years ago

Back in the late 90's I used to carry a memory stick with VNC and putty upon that I use to tunnel a VNC connection over SSH to my home network and oven over bonded ISDN (128k which I had at the time in the UK) it was more than usable or attaching to any of my systems.

Then Cygwin came of age, proved very very very useful for adding the tools windows corporate desktops missed out upon for work related activities.

But in all that time, PuTTy has been a very good terminal client for SSH needs. Whilst it is good that Microsoft is adding this, it has never been a hurdle for many and those who run into a corporate wall that tough, have always been able (from the ones I've worked with and collegues) been able to circumnavigate around it :- Usually using the corporate security policies to bash the corporate desktop witch upon the head. Fight fire with fire if you can't bend the rules.

I am missing the point you are trying to make.

For those who like -- and prefer -- GUI, Putty (or any other GUI based SSH client) will remain king. For the rest, this is very good news. It is the same client many have been using for many years under their Unix alike OS, just on Microsoft Windows.

  • Point being, those who wanted SSH or unix tools under windows - there have always been options, even with the most zealous of corporate desktop policy that I have encountered and in the worst cases, you can use the corporate security policy to make that happen.