Kermit on the Vector 3 emulates a DEC VT52, with certain limitations. It only works well at speeds up to 1200 baud. There doesn't seem to be a way to change the baud rate anyway. Even at 1200 baud, it loses characters during terminal emulation, after a carriage-return-linefeed sequence is received during scrolling. During terminal emulation, beeps do not sound. Finally, the normal CONNECT-mode escape sequence lead-in character for the Vector is tilde because the original Vector model that the program was written for had a tilde key, but was not able to transmit the more customary escape characters like ^] or Ctrl-Backslash. However, the Vector 3 does not even have a tilde key, so before issuing the CONNECT command, you must SET ESCAPE to some character that you don't expect to type on the remote host, like #. Files: KERMIT.COM is the Kermit program. CP4KER.DOC is the CP/M-80 chapter of the Kermit User Guide CP4KER.BWR is the "beware" file, listing known bugs & limitations of CP/M-80 Kermit. CP4KER.UPD is the edit history of the program. CP4KER.HEX is the Intel hex format system-independent portion of the program. CP4VEC.HEX is the Intel hex format Vector-dependent portion of the program. CP4VEC.HLP is this file. HEXCHK.BAS is an EMBASIC program to check the validity of an Intel hex file.