Using the Terminal Emulation Menus—Chapter 4
177TE 2000
5250 Terminal Emulation Programmer’s Guide
2415, 2425, 2435A, 2455, 2475, 248X Terminals
The following instructions are specific for 2415, 2425, 2435A, 2455,
2475, and 248X Terminals.
You can configure several opti ons for TE 2000 5250 on your Trakker An-
tares
R
Terminal, including:
S UDPPlusorTCP/IPcommunications
S VT/ANSI options
S Main Menu password
Note: You can also set the password for UDP Plus Terminals from the In-
termec Application Server.
You can access the TE 2000 configu ration menus when the initialization
screens appear or once you establish a TE 2000 session. The TE 2000 init-
ialization screens appear each time you r eboot the terminal or r estart your
application.
Note: Some parameters for 2415, 2425, 2435A, 2455, 2475, and 248X
Terminals are available through the TRAKKER Antares 2400 Menu Sys-
tem. They are not reproduced in the TE 2000 configuration menus. See
the terminal’s user manual for information about the menu system.
6400 Computer
The terminal emulation screens support terminals running Intermec Ter-
minal Emulation or 6400 TCP/IP software. Thi s describes the menus used
to set operating and scanning parameters for the hand-held computer.
Additional information can be found in the technical overview for your
emulation program.
Note: Ensure there is a f ully-charged battery pack in the 6400 Computer
before setting parameters.
Opening the Main Menu
The Main Menu is the first screen displayed when you open the computer
menus. All other menus are accessed from the Main Menu. To open the
Main Menu, press [Yellow],then[Blue]. Briefly, these keys generally op-
erate as:
S [Blue] for functions labeled by blue legends above the keys.
S [Green] for functions labeled by green legends above the keys.
S [Yellow] for functions labeled by yellow legends above the keys.
S [Blue],then[Green] shift is CAPS LOCK.
S [Blue],then[Yellow] shift is Alphabetic Lock (6400 Computer 41-key
units).
S [Yellow],then[Blue] shift is Terminal Emulation menus; your particu-
lar emulation software probably treat the keys for contrast control, back-
lighting and other functions differently.