Yep W10 but the OS don't matter if you use a browser, any browser can access the inbuilt webserver and like I said, if you need file timestamps you need setup the NTP IP and I/O with the scopes IP address.
Once that's done there is zero need for Telnet.
There is zero need to switch context? I ran the commands:
nvim keygen.py
python3 keygen.py
telnet 192.168.8.117 5024
All in the same terminal. Why would I bother to switch to a browser for the last step?
I am a developer and a system administrator. I work my whole day in a terminal. I suspect the last part is what may be hard to get :-)
As for setting up the IP address, that happens by DHCP and has to be done before you can access the scope from either terminal or browser. I am having a hard time seeing what your point is there?
But since we are in a thread about this scope, I will come with some critique: the scope came with static IP selected and some random IP entered into the fields. It should have come with DHCP enabled instead. Also you have to enter an IP address for NTP. Instead it should just use pool.ntp.org and do that automatically. Finally even though I configured my timezone it is still wrong by 1 hour. It apparently does not know how to do daylight saving compensation.