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Full Discussion: Bridging Talk
Top Forums Programming Bridging Talk Post 303028738 by Neo on Monday 14th of January 2019 05:00:53 AM
Old 01-14-2019
Quote:
Originally Posted by homebeach
In this context bridging means connectivity to other networks. For example using talk to join IRC channel. This would be achieved by making a program that relays messages to IRC and back.
Well, that sound like a fun project.

But does anyone actually use IRC and UNIX talk these days?

I thought everyone uses FB, WhatsApp, Line, WeChat, etc . ... blah blah blah for messaging!
 

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talkd(8c)																 talkd(8c)

Name
       talkd - inter-terminal communications server

Syntax
       /etc/talkd

Description
       The  program  is  the  server  for the program.	The server provides a rendezvous method for the requesting (possibly remote) and the local
       responding

       The server is invoked by when it receives a packet on the port indicated in the talk service specification.

Restrictions
       The server does not strictly follow network byte order in its packet format and may have difficulty in talking with implementations  of	on
       other architectures that do not take this into account.

       The  version  of  released  with ULTRIX V3.0 uses a protocol that is incompatible with the protocol used in earlier versions. Starting with
       ULTRIX V3.0, the program communicates with other machines running ULTRIX, V3.0 (and later), and machines running 4.3  BSD  or  versions	of
       UNIX based on 4.3 BSD.

       The command is not 8-bit clean. Typing in DEC Multinational Characters (DECMCS) causes the characters to echo as a sequence of a carets (^)
       followed by the character represented with its high bit cleared. This limitation makes unusable if you want to communicate using a language
       which has DECMCS characters in its alphabet.

See Also
       talk(1), services(5), inetd(8c), ntalkd(8c)

																	 talkd(8c)
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