testing again, wvdial can make phone call too but quality is not good. the
sound too noise.
just modify config file. provide phone, username, password (don't care about
username/password here)

Thang Kieu

On 8/17/07, Kieu Minh Thang <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Hi all,
> That's great, I have tried with minicom and looking around for some AT
> commands.
> Have been successful to dial with minicom.
> connect to modem.....
> ATDT <phone_number>
> quality is good enough
>
> Thang Kieu
>
> On 8/17/07, Kieu Minh Thang <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> > I have checked wvdial and have use minicom before.
> > wvdial seems to used to dialup connect, not to make phone call
> > I have used minicom to handle some circuit (it's likely to HyperTerminal
> > on Windows), I think this can be use to dial because it handle modem with AT
> > commands. If I know AT commands, I can make phone call too.
> > Maybe dtmfdial is a solution too, but I don't know how to configure it
> > yet.
> >
> > any other idea, who have make phone call using modem on Linux before?
> > Please let me know.
> >
> > Thank you all. ;)
> >
> > Thang Kieu
> >
> > On 8/11/07, Ken Irving < [EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > >
> > > On Fri, Aug 10, 2007 at 11:20:20PM -0700, Jeff D wrote:
> > > > On Sat, 11 Aug 2007, Kieu Minh Thang wrote:
> > > >>
> > > >> I have install dtmfdial, but it seems my Debian doesn't have driver
> > > for
> > > >> modem. But I see that dtmfdial is very simple program, just a
> > > binary file,
> > > >> no config file. How does this know what device used to dial, where
> > > can I
> > > >> config modem device for it ?
> > > >>
> > > > you might want to check out wvdial, I've used it before with good
> > > results.
> > >
> > > Minicom is useful to manually control a modem, also cu and probably
> > > others, by typing commands to the modem.  The serial interface, or
> > > "driver", to the modem is well built into the Linux system
> > >
> > > An automated "phone dialer" probably exists as a package or project;
> > > I'd try googling for those terms, use 'apt-cache search ...', look on
> > > sourceforge and other software development sites.
> > >
> > > I wrote a simple and not very flexible "phone dialer" as an exercise
> > > to learn Perl/Tk one time, using the perl Expect module to handle
> > > the interactive nature of the problem, and cu as the backend to talk
> > > to the modem.  It presents a few buttons in a window to connect to a
> > > phone voice message system, listen and delete messages, and
> > > disconnect,
> > > and optionally puts up a keypad.  I suspect you might be looking for
> > > something like this, and you're welcome to it, but there are also
> > > likely
> > > more fully featured and configurable gizmos out there.
> > >
> > > You described what you wanted by saying it was "like" some other
> > > program;
> > > without being familiar with that program, it's hard to know what you
> > > want.
> > >
> > > (Hmm, reminds me of the Microsoft approach to "office" software
> > > standards...)
> > >
> > > Ken
> > >
> > > --
> > > Ken Irving, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > >
> > >
> > > --
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> > > with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact
> > > [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > >
> > >
> >
>

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