I use Ajaxterm frequently as a handy way to administer a web server from anywhere. It worked well for me until I switched to Chrome as my primary browser. Ajaxterm works great with Firefox and IE8, but is unusable with Chrome, Safari and Opera.
I found that on Chrome, Safari and Opera, many ‘special’ keys don’t get passed through to Ajaxterm, including backspace, the arrow keys, ctrl+c, ctrl+h, home, end, etc. Opera is even worse: when you press shift, the keypress gets translated into ^P, so you can’t type capitals. These things are showstoppers for me; they are probably showstoppers for you too.
Anyterm worked fine for me in all browsers I tried, including IE6.
Other things to bear in mind:
- Anyterm keeps a connection open constantly while it is running, and uses a second connection for keypresses. All browsers have a limit on the number of concurrent connections to a single host. IE 7 and below have a limit of two concurrent connections (as required by the HTTP spec), so a single instance of Anyterm could max out connections to that host much of the time. However this is reasonably easy to work round by simply using a separate hostname for Anyterm.
- Ajaxterm polls for updates, so it does not keep a connection open constantly. It uses the same connection for keypresses and screen updates. On the other hand the screen does not always update as soon as it could, and the network overhead per screen update is greater.
- Ajaxterm updates the whole screen in one go, even to change a single character. Anyterm updates only the portion of the screen that has changed. It is debatable which is faster; a whole screen can usually fit in a single packet anyway, and Anyterm’s approach has greater processing overhead, both on the server and client side.
Note: My comments on Ajaxterm are based on Ajaxterm 0.10. I haven’t tried 0.11, which apparently includes ‘minor patches’. My comments on Anyterm are based on the demos available on their site. I haven’t actually used it in anger.