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As prices of memory and computation fell, the local computing power increased, making the terminals themselves more powerful. In this process, initially, emulation of the functions of a terminal was a process that played out between terminal manufacturers, where the manufacturers of one type of terminal emulated the functions of another manufacturer. For example a Wyse-60 terminal offered a total of 15 so called "Personalities", among them those of competitors like [[Televideo]]-925, [[Digital_Equipment_Corporation|DEC]] [[VT100]] and [[IBM 3101]].<ref>[http://bitsavers.trailing-edge.com/pdf/wyse/WY-60/Wyse_WY60_Users_Guide.pdf Wyse 60 User's Guide, page 2-5]</ref>
When personal computers became ubiquitous in the 1980s, they offered the option of running software on the user's
During the 1990s, new operating systems like [[Windows]] and [[OS/2]] arrived, providing the technical background for more terminal emulators like [https://winworldpc.com/product/telix/100-for-windows Telix for Windows], [[ZOC|ZOC for OS/2]], or [[PuTTY]], which was initially released for Windows in 1998 and which (together with its derivates) is still one a very popular choice to this day<ref>[https://www.slant.co/topics/1552/~best-terminal-emulators-for-windows SSH Clients for Windows]</ref>.
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