en get a
> >>>Fully Serial Modem. It is very tough to make an External modem with a
> >>>(real) Serial port a "Winmodem" and still be capable of v.92.
> >>By "Fully Serial Modem" you mean a modem that connects ONLY through a
> >>serial
Douglas Tutty wrote:
On Fri, Dec 08, 2006 at 05:07:15PM -0500, rs wrote:
--- On Fri 12/08, Greg Folkert wrote:
If you want a USB POTS Modem, get a USB Serial Port dongle, then get a
Fully Serial Modem. It is very tough to make an External modem with a
(real) Serial port a "Winmodem
On Fri, Dec 08, 2006 at 05:07:15PM -0500, rs wrote:
>
>
> --- On Fri 12/08, Greg Folkert wrote:
> > If you want a USB POTS Modem, get a USB Serial Port dongle, then get a
> > Fully Serial Modem. It is very tough to make an External modem with a
> > (real) Serial por
On Fri, 2006-12-08 at 17:07 -0500, rs wrote:
>
> --- On Fri 12/08, Greg Folkert wrote:
> > If you want a USB POTS Modem, get a USB Serial Port dongle, then get a
> > Fully Serial Modem. It is very tough to make an External modem with a
> > (real) Serial port a "Winm
--- On Fri 12/08, Greg Folkert wrote:
> If you want a USB POTS Modem, get a USB Serial Port dongle, then get a
> Fully Serial Modem. It is very tough to make an External modem with a
> (real) Serial port a "Winmodem" and still be capable of v.92.
By "Fully Serial Mode
On Fri, 2006-12-08 at 16:02 -0500, rs wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> Could anyone confirm if Dynex DX-M300 USB external modem
> (
> http://www.dynexproducts.com/pc-31-5-56k-v92-usb-external-datafax-modem.aspx
> ) works OK with Debian?
>
> Thanks
Well, a quick look at the Qui
Hi,
Could anyone confirm if Dynex DX-M300 USB external modem (
http://www.dynexproducts.com/pc-31-5-56k-v92-usb-external-datafax-modem.aspx )
works OK with Debian?
Thanks
___
No banners. No pop-ups. No kidding.
Make My Way your home on the
Mr Mike wrote:
I'm guessing you are relatively new to linux?? pon and poff are part
and parcial and should be on all linux if ppp is installed..
I've never heard of these before. Admittedly I haven't dialled up for 5
or so years, but when I did, wvdial was the de-facto standard.
--
To UNSU
Todd A. Jacobs writes:
> What is pon?
The standard Debian command-line tool for starting PPP. 'poff' stops PPP.
Pppconfig, which is part of the base system and is run during installation,
configures PPP for use with pon and poff [1].
> What package does it belong to?
PPP.
> Most people use wvd
On 06/03/2005 07:03:38 PM, Todd A. Jacobs wrote:
On Mon, May 30, 2005 at 08:55:37AM -0700, Muhammad Ali wrote:
> the command pon but not able to connect internet. What could be the
> problem. Please help me out. Regards Ali
Well, it could be a lot of things... what error msgs do you get and
On Mon, May 30, 2005 at 08:55:37AM -0700, Muhammad Ali wrote:
> the command pon but not able to connect internet. What could be the
> problem. Please help me out. Regards Ali
What is pon? What package does it belong to? Most people use wvdial,
with a nice front-end such as gnome-ppp.
Assuming th
Hi,
Thanks for your help. I used Knoppix to install Debian. Knoppix has its own utilities for Internet connections. I used it to configure my account. When I was using 115200, the modem was dialing but not connecting. But on reducing the rate to 52000, it connected on 2nd attempt. Now its working.
> Here is a link to help setup Debian for dialup.
> http://newbiedoc.sourceforge.net/peripherals/modem.html
It isn't necessary to install pppconfig. It's in the base system.
--
John Hasler
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL
Muhammad Ali quotes:
> I have configured my external modem (it has been detected by debian)
> according to this article http://www.aboutdebian.com/modems.htm
This is unnecessarily complex. All you need to do to configure your modem
is run pppconfig as root and follow directions. When y
On Monday 30 May 2005 17:38, Muhammad Ali wrote:
Hello Muhammad.
Here are the steps I take to setup a dialup connection.
If the box as a ethernet card installed you will need to set up the system for
a static ip address for that ethernet card. The ethernet card static ip needs
no gateway ip
Note: forwarded message attached.__Do You Yahoo!?Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around http://mail.yahoo.com --- Begin Message ---
Hi,
I have configured my external modem (it has been detected by debian) according to this
Thank You
I sent a thank you e-mail to colin. via the reply
button. Both times it was returned.
I will purchase the above Modem on
Monday
Christopher Bragg
*Please turn on your line wraps*
"Preston Boyington" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> John Hasler wrote:
> : Preston writes:
> :: This weekend I installed a base Debian system using the new
> :: installer. My only "problem" is after using pppconfig to setup my
&g
"Preston Boyington" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I am wondering if it may have something to do with DHCP that was
> setup during the install. How do I change it to a static IP address
> and try it that way? Have others experienced something similar?
DHCP is not used on PPP, PPP itself handles a
John Hasler wrote:
: Preston writes:
:: This weekend I installed a base Debian system using the new
:: installer. My only "problem" is after using pppconfig to setup my
:: external modem it will activate the modem (dial and apparently
:: connect) but I can't get apt-setup to connect
Preston writes:
> This weekend I installed a base Debian system using the new installer.
> My only "problem" is after using pppconfig to setup my external modem it
> will activate the modem (dial and apparently connect) but I can't get
> apt-setup to connect to any s
Hello
Preston Boyington (<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>) wrote:
> This weekend I installed a base Debian system using the new installer.
> My only "problem" is after using pppconfig to setup my external modem
> it will activate the modem (dial and apparently connect) but I can
This weekend I installed a base Debian system using the new installer. My only
"problem" is after using pppconfig to setup my external modem it will activate the
modem (dial and apparently connect) but I can't get apt-setup to connect to any
sources to download programs. I &quo
>which kernel are you using, and does it have VJ
>compression enabled?
>the option should be around the configuration item
>for PPP.
2.0.36
As far a VJ compression...I think so. In the
/etc/ppp/options file I do not have "-vj" set which, I
believe, disables VJ compression.
Thanks,
Adam
__
Try adding 'noccp' to /etc/ppp/options.
--
John Hasler
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Dancing Horse Hill
Elmwood, Wisconsin
which kernel are you using, and does it have VJ compression enabled?
the option should be around the configuration item for PPP.
martin
>Martin F. Krafft writes:
>> ...or use pon/pff with pppconfig, adding the line
>>debug to
>> /etc/ppp/peers/.
>pppconfig adds that line by default (you can turn it
>off in the 'Advanced' menu).
>> ...while monitoring /var/log/ppp.log.
>Which you can do with plog.
Here is a copy of the ppp.log.
Martin F. Krafft writes:
> ...or use pon/pff with pppconfig, adding the line debug to
> /etc/ppp/peers/.
pppconfig adds that line by default (you can turn it off in the 'Advanced'
menu).
> ...while monitoring /var/log/ppp.log.
Which you can do with plog.
--
John Hasler
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Dancing
also sprach adam krell (on Fri, 17 Aug 2001 11:06:25AM -0700):
> I have an external modem (Hayes Accura 336 V.34)
> connected to ttyS1. I have configured wvdial and I
> can call out and establish a ppp connection
> successfully. However, when I start some network
> activity (ping
Hi,
I have an external modem (Hayes Accura 336 V.34)
connected to ttyS1. I have configured wvdial and I
can call out and establish a ppp connection
successfully. However, when I start some network
activity (ping an address, get a web page, etc.) the
phone line drops and the modem resets and
Hi,
I'm trying to use a external ISDN modem to connect w/o
success. As I don't have a ISDN provider yet, I'm just calling my
present provider (non-ISDN). Is this possible, that is, can I
connect to non-ISDN provider using a ISDN modem/line (U Line).
The NT is from CS Telecom (Fran
modem off, and another time it hung the
shutdown process until I turned the modem off. I seem to have something
seriously
misconfigured -- any help would be much appreciated.
Richard
Richard Weil wrote:
> Aaargh. I had posted about a problem I was having with my external
> modem a few da
Aaargh. I had posted about a problem I was having with my external
modem a few days ago and then it suddenly started working. Well now,
without my having done anything much, it now seems to have stopped
working.
I'm running Potato with a 2.2.12 kernel. The modem is a US Robotics 56k
Fax
Oops. I feel a little silly. Almost right after posting this message I
installed and
ran a version of the 2.2.12 kernel I compiled with plug-and-play included and
the
modem works fine now. Thanks anyway.
Richard Weil wrote:
> I'm having a problem with an external US Robotics 56K Faxmodem. I
I'm having a problem with an external US Robotics 56K Faxmodem. I'm
running a Potato system with the 2.2.12 kernel on a Toshiba Tecra
700CT. I have never gotten the modem to work with Linux before, but I
have used it with Windows.
The problem is this: when I run Minicom (or anything else that re
Hi,
I am a Debian user. I want to replace my LT Win Modem
by a external modem. I wonder if LFM-56OTS2 external
modem of Logitec or GH-EM56W external modem of Pragmatic(?)
work with Linux.
Thanks in advance,
Ar Wen
Person, Roderick <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
[...]
> been spending time upgrading hardway. I aquired a 33.6 3Com
> external modem. Quite a boost from my old 14.4...I quess If I did
> get so many F#$ CRC errors.
I found that my USR Courier did exactly the same thing - lots of
suspic
Hey all,
been spending time upgrading hardway. I aquired a 33.6 3Com external modem.
Quite a boost from my old 14.4...I quess If I did get so many F#$ CRC
errors.
I've tried what the manual syas to do
load AT&F1 no luck, different phone line. Lower the port rate no lu
38 matches
Mail list logo