from
The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (8 July 2008)
XMODEM
<communications> {Ward Christensen}'s file transfer
{protocol}, probably the most widely available protocol used
for file transfer over {serial lines} (e.g. between {modems}).
XMODEM uses 128-byte {packets} with {error detection},
allowing the receiver to request retransmission of a corrupted
packet. XModem is fairly slow but reliable.
Several variations have been proposed with increasing packet
sizes (e.g. {XMODEM-1K}) and different error detection ({CRC}
instead of {checksum}) to take advantage of faster modems.
Sending and receiving programs can negotiate to establish the
best protocol they both support.
John Mahr wrote the original XMODEM CRC error correction code.
This implementation was backward compatible with Christensen's
original checksum code. It improved the error detection from
98% to 99.97% and improved the reliability of transmitting
{binary files}.
Standard XMODEM specifies a one-second {timeout} during the
reception of characters in the data block portion of a packet.
Chuck Forsberg improved upon XMODEM by developing {YMODEM} and
{ZMODEM}.
[Chuck Forsberg, "XMODEM/YMODEM Protocol Reference"].
(2005-09-16)