Connect to WebDAV, FTP, Amazon S3, FTPS, or SFTP servers through a virtual drive which is a full file-system drive which works in DOS, PowerShell, etc.
Purpose: to mount a remote directory on my local Ubuntu Linux Desktop system using SFTP (which is SSH in an FTP-like fashion). The goal is to easily gain access to a remote system’s files through another folder on my desktop. Debina/Ubuntu allows you to easily mount SSH folders via the GUI, however, these mounts won’t show up in the terminal (and in some programs). I used sshfs to accomplish this.
Remote editing with ssh - no need to tunnel X11 over ssh.
This reminds me of a question that puzzles me: for those of us that use multiple machines, is there a failsafe way to have a master .emacs file for them all? Where do folks store it? On a web server, ftp, NFS directory, a favourite home directory, or a USB stick? Is there a low effort way to sync it: rsync, unison, a custom shell or Emacs lisp script, or a manual scp?
Remote editing with ssh - no need to tunnel X11 over ssh, or cope without your window manager.
This reminds me of a question that puzzles me: for those of us that use multiple machines, is there a failsafe way to have a master .emacs file for them all? Where do folks store it? On a web server, ftp, NFS directory, a favourite home directory, or a USB stick? Is there a low effort way to sync it: rsync, unison, a custom shell or Emacs lisp script, or a manual scp?
Expect is an extension to the Tcl scripting language to create an automation and testing tool for CLI applications such as telnet, ftp, passwd, fsck, rlogin, tip, ssh, et., and because it wraps the standard command-line interface, it can be used to automate any arbitrary applications that are accessed over a terminal.
An open source project to collect and distribute "Tasks" for MSBuild. lats of them available already like FTP, Source Control, Windows Script, Zip and more.
A nice commecrial XML editor that not only has excellent validation, xslt and xpath and xquery, andformatting objects (fo) features, but supports an XML data grid view and XML Diff & Merge! It even supports generating SVG graphics via XSL transforms on data files, remote editing over FTP or WebDav, and is available as an Eclipse plugin. Only $48 for Academic use.