Re: [newbie] Modem jumper settings

2000-02-17 Thread Brent Timmer

for one, I dn't know if you typed this the first time, but in your rc.local
it should be /dev/ttyS2 instead of dev/ttyS2.  Also, I forgot to mention
that also in your isapnp.conf file you have to un-comment a line near the
bottom that says something to the effect of (ans y).  This tells it to
accept your configuration.  Also, within each block of paramaters, make sure
you ONLY uncomment the two lines identifying irq and base:

i.e.
(IO 0 (SIZE 8) (BASE 0x02f8))
and
(INT 0 (IRQ 3 (MODE +E)))

Hope this helps.


- Original Message -
From: Steve Leseman [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, February 17, 2000 2:25 AM
Subject: Re: [newbie] Modem jumper settings


 Hi - I followed your instructions for getting Plug  Play to work for my
 PnP USR modem, and everything went as you laidout, until I rebooted. In
red
 text, it roughly said, "don't know what to do with start dependent
 functions no action taken can't parse isapnp.conf... around line
64
 or priority acceptable". It was only on the screen for a brief amount of
 time so I might not have it typed out exactly right, but it's close.
Here's
 what the section of the isapnp.conf file I modified looks like:

 start dependent functions: priority acceptable
 # logical device decodes 16 bit io address lines
 minimum io base address 0x03e8
 maximum io base address 0x03e8
 # io base alignment 8 bytes
 number of io addresses required: 8
 (io (size 8) (base 0x03e8))
 # IRQ 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 10, 11, 12, or 15.
 IRQ 2
 high true, edge sensitive interrupt (by default)
 (int 0 (IRQ 2 (mode + E)))

 and the line I added to the end of the rc.local file reads:

 setserial dev/ttyS2 port 0x3e8 irq 2 spd_vhi autoconfig

 I really appreciate any further help! I've been trying to get it working
 for over 2 hours tonight alone! The strange thing about it though, is that
 before my computer was upgraded the same modem worked fine in the same
 version of Mandrake (6.0). But the shop installed it back in a different
 slot, and now it is on COM 3 (it was COM 2 before). Thanks!!!


 At 11:02 AM 2/15/00 -0500, you wrote:
 For all you with pnp modem problems, this is how I got my usr 56k
internal
 ISA modem to work pnp:
 
 1.Type "/sbin/pnpdump  /etc/isapnp.conf" ##this loads info on your
 ISA PnP board(s) into the appropriate .conf file.
 
 2.Type "/sbin/isapnp /etc/isapnp.conf"  ##this makes your existing
 ISA PnP configuration active.
 
 3.  open your isapnp.conf file.  You will have to remove the comment line
 from a couple of the resources listed, depending on how you want to set
it
 up.  Half way down the file you'll see a comment that says multiple
choice
 time.
 You have to choose what IRQ and com you want to use.  Com1=0x3f8,
 Com2=0x2f8,
 Com3=0x3e8, Com4=0x2e8.  Here is an example of what I uncommented:
 # Start dependent functions: priority preferred
 
 # Fixed IO base address 0x02f8
 
 # Number of IO addresses required: 8
 
 (IO 0 (SIZE 8) (BASE 0x02f8))
 
 # IRQ 3.
 
 # High true, edge sensitive interrupt (by default)
 
 (INT 0 (IRQ 3 (MODE +E)))
 
 This put me on Com2 IRQ 3.  After you know what com port and irq you set
it
 to,
 you can go onto the next step
 
 3.Type "setserial /dev/ttySx port y irq z spd_vhi autoconfig"
 ##notation is as follows: "x" is your COMport, with 0=COM1, 1=COM2,
 2=COM3, 3=COM4; "y" is the standard (or defined) address of that port,
 e.g. 0x3e8; "z" is the interrupt used by that port, usually 4 or 3;
 thus, if your modem is on COM1 with a standard address  IRQ, the line
 would read "setserial /dev/ttyS0 port 0x3f8 irq 4 spd_vhi autoconfig" .
 Oh, yes:"spd_vhi" is optional, I'd advise using it with a 56k modem,
 mine runs faster with it, but you could leave it off without a problem.
 
 4.Type "rm /dev/modem"  ##you may get a "not found" message, which
 is fine; if a /dev/modem" is found, you'll be asked to confirm this
 removal, type "y" to proceed.
 
 5.Type "ln -s /dev/ttySx /dev/modem"  ##this establishes the linkage
 needed for your modem, not essential, but conventional; again, "x" here
 is the same as "x" in item 3 above.
 
 6.With a text editor, open your "/rc.local" file, add the
 "setserial" command defined in item 3 above at the end of the file, save
 the file and exit the editor. ##For example, if your editor is xemacs,
 you'd type "xemacs /etc/rc.d/rc.local", then add the "setserial" command
 line.
 
 7.Exit, logout, and reboot (not just restart Xserver). You should
 see a line for ISA PnP devices as you boot up. That should do it :)
 
 Thanks to Alan for help via his previous message
 - Original Message -
 From: "Ron Sinclair" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, February 15, 2000 5:53 AM
 Subject: Re: [newbie] Modem jumper settings
 

Re: [newbie] Modem jumper settings

2000-02-17 Thread Brent Timmer

Your modem may still be able to be on com 2.  Since this is plug and play,
it doesn't HAVE to be on thhe same port as it is in windows.  As long as
com2 is open(and the irq associated with it), you can configure it to be on
com2 in your iaspnp.conf file.


- Original Message -
From: Steve Leseman [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, February 17, 2000 2:25 AM
Subject: Re: [newbie] Modem jumper settings


 Hi - I followed your instructions for getting Plug  Play to work for my
 PnP USR modem, and everything went as you laidout, until I rebooted. In
red
 text, it roughly said, "don't know what to do with start dependent
 functions no action taken can't parse isapnp.conf... around line
64
 or priority acceptable". It was only on the screen for a brief amount of
 time so I might not have it typed out exactly right, but it's close.
Here's
 what the section of the isapnp.conf file I modified looks like:

 start dependent functions: priority acceptable
 # logical device decodes 16 bit io address lines
 minimum io base address 0x03e8
 maximum io base address 0x03e8
 # io base alignment 8 bytes
 number of io addresses required: 8
 (io (size 8) (base 0x03e8))
 # IRQ 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 10, 11, 12, or 15.
 IRQ 2
 high true, edge sensitive interrupt (by default)
 (int 0 (IRQ 2 (mode + E)))

 and the line I added to the end of the rc.local file reads:

 setserial dev/ttyS2 port 0x3e8 irq 2 spd_vhi autoconfig

 I really appreciate any further help! I've been trying to get it working
 for over 2 hours tonight alone! The strange thing about it though, is that
 before my computer was upgraded the same modem worked fine in the same
 version of Mandrake (6.0). But the shop installed it back in a different
 slot, and now it is on COM 3 (it was COM 2 before). Thanks!!!


 At 11:02 AM 2/15/00 -0500, you wrote:
 For all you with pnp modem problems, this is how I got my usr 56k
internal
 ISA modem to work pnp:
 
 1.Type "/sbin/pnpdump  /etc/isapnp.conf" ##this loads info on your
 ISA PnP board(s) into the appropriate .conf file.
 
 2.Type "/sbin/isapnp /etc/isapnp.conf"  ##this makes your existing
 ISA PnP configuration active.
 
 3.  open your isapnp.conf file.  You will have to remove the comment line
 from a couple of the resources listed, depending on how you want to set
it
 up.  Half way down the file you'll see a comment that says multiple
choice
 time.
 You have to choose what IRQ and com you want to use.  Com1=0x3f8,
 Com2=0x2f8,
 Com3=0x3e8, Com4=0x2e8.  Here is an example of what I uncommented:
 # Start dependent functions: priority preferred
 
 # Fixed IO base address 0x02f8
 
 # Number of IO addresses required: 8
 
 (IO 0 (SIZE 8) (BASE 0x02f8))
 
 # IRQ 3.
 
 # High true, edge sensitive interrupt (by default)
 
 (INT 0 (IRQ 3 (MODE +E)))
 
 This put me on Com2 IRQ 3.  After you know what com port and irq you set
it
 to,
 you can go onto the next step
 
 3.Type "setserial /dev/ttySx port y irq z spd_vhi autoconfig"
 ##notation is as follows: "x" is your COMport, with 0=COM1, 1=COM2,
 2=COM3, 3=COM4; "y" is the standard (or defined) address of that port,
 e.g. 0x3e8; "z" is the interrupt used by that port, usually 4 or 3;
 thus, if your modem is on COM1 with a standard address  IRQ, the line
 would read "setserial /dev/ttyS0 port 0x3f8 irq 4 spd_vhi autoconfig" .
 Oh, yes:"spd_vhi" is optional, I'd advise using it with a 56k modem,
 mine runs faster with it, but you could leave it off without a problem.
 
 4.Type "rm /dev/modem"  ##you may get a "not found" message, which
 is fine; if a /dev/modem" is found, you'll be asked to confirm this
 removal, type "y" to proceed.
 
 5.Type "ln -s /dev/ttySx /dev/modem"  ##this establishes the linkage
 needed for your modem, not essential, but conventional; again, "x" here
 is the same as "x" in item 3 above.
 
 6.With a text editor, open your "/rc.local" file, add the
 "setserial" command defined in item 3 above at the end of the file, save
 the file and exit the editor. ##For example, if your editor is xemacs,
 you'd type "xemacs /etc/rc.d/rc.local", then add the "setserial" command
 line.
 
 7.Exit, logout, and reboot (not just restart Xserver). You should
 see a line for ISA PnP devices as you boot up. That should do it :)
 
 Thanks to Alan for help via his previous message
 - Original Message -
 From: "Ron Sinclair" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, February 15, 2000 5:53 AM
 Subject: Re: [newbie] Modem jumper settings
 
 
   At 01:38 AM 2/15/00 -0500, you wrote:
   Is there a way to get linux to detect my USR internal 56k modem when
the
   cards jumpers are set to PnP?
   Right now I have to set the jumpers to PnP to work with windows and
set
   the jumpers to 

Re: [newbie] Modem jumper settings

2000-02-17 Thread Steve Leseman

Thanks, that did it! It's finally working, and no jumpers to worry about!

At 09:13 AM 2/17/00 -0500, you wrote:
Your modem may still be able to be on com 2.  Since this is plug and play,
it doesn't HAVE to be on thhe same port as it is in windows.  As long as
com2 is open(and the irq associated with it), you can configure it to be on
com2 in your iaspnp.conf file.


- Original Message -
From: Steve Leseman [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, February 17, 2000 2:25 AM
Subject: Re: [newbie] Modem jumper settings


  Hi - I followed your instructions for getting Plug  Play to work for my
  PnP USR modem, and everything went as you laidout, until I rebooted. In
red
  text, it roughly said, "don't know what to do with start dependent
  functions no action taken can't parse isapnp.conf... around line
64
  or priority acceptable". It was only on the screen for a brief amount of
  time so I might not have it typed out exactly right, but it's close.
Here's
  what the section of the isapnp.conf file I modified looks like:
 
  start dependent functions: priority acceptable
  # logical device decodes 16 bit io address lines
  minimum io base address 0x03e8
  maximum io base address 0x03e8
  # io base alignment 8 bytes
  number of io addresses required: 8
  (io (size 8) (base 0x03e8))
  # IRQ 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 10, 11, 12, or 15.
  IRQ 2
  high true, edge sensitive interrupt (by default)
  (int 0 (IRQ 2 (mode + E)))
 
  and the line I added to the end of the rc.local file reads:
 
  setserial dev/ttyS2 port 0x3e8 irq 2 spd_vhi autoconfig
 
  I really appreciate any further help! I've been trying to get it working
  for over 2 hours tonight alone! The strange thing about it though, is that
  before my computer was upgraded the same modem worked fine in the same
  version of Mandrake (6.0). But the shop installed it back in a different
  slot, and now it is on COM 3 (it was COM 2 before). Thanks!!!
 
 
  At 11:02 AM 2/15/00 -0500, you wrote:
  For all you with pnp modem problems, this is how I got my usr 56k
internal
  ISA modem to work pnp:
  
  1.Type "/sbin/pnpdump  /etc/isapnp.conf" ##this loads info on your
  ISA PnP board(s) into the appropriate .conf file.
  
  2.Type "/sbin/isapnp /etc/isapnp.conf"  ##this makes your existing
  ISA PnP configuration active.
  
  3.  open your isapnp.conf file.  You will have to remove the comment line
  from a couple of the resources listed, depending on how you want to set
it
  up.  Half way down the file you'll see a comment that says multiple
choice
  time.
  You have to choose what IRQ and com you want to use.  Com1=0x3f8,
  Com2=0x2f8,
  Com3=0x3e8, Com4=0x2e8.  Here is an example of what I uncommented:
  # Start dependent functions: priority preferred
  
  # Fixed IO base address 0x02f8
  
  # Number of IO addresses required: 8
  
  (IO 0 (SIZE 8) (BASE 0x02f8))
  
  # IRQ 3.
  
  # High true, edge sensitive interrupt (by default)
  
  (INT 0 (IRQ 3 (MODE +E)))
  
  This put me on Com2 IRQ 3.  After you know what com port and irq you set
it
  to,
  you can go onto the next step
  
  3.Type "setserial /dev/ttySx port y irq z spd_vhi autoconfig"
  ##notation is as follows: "x" is your COMport, with 0=COM1, 1=COM2,
  2=COM3, 3=COM4; "y" is the standard (or defined) address of that port,
  e.g. 0x3e8; "z" is the interrupt used by that port, usually 4 or 3;
  thus, if your modem is on COM1 with a standard address  IRQ, the line
  would read "setserial /dev/ttyS0 port 0x3f8 irq 4 spd_vhi autoconfig" .
  Oh, yes:"spd_vhi" is optional, I'd advise using it with a 56k modem,
  mine runs faster with it, but you could leave it off without a problem.
  
  4.Type "rm /dev/modem"  ##you may get a "not found" message, which
  is fine; if a /dev/modem" is found, you'll be asked to confirm this
  removal, type "y" to proceed.
  
  5.Type "ln -s /dev/ttySx /dev/modem"  ##this establishes the linkage
  needed for your modem, not essential, but conventional; again, "x" here
  is the same as "x" in item 3 above.
  
  6.With a text editor, open your "/rc.local" file, add the
  "setserial" command defined in item 3 above at the end of the file, save
  the file and exit the editor. ##For example, if your editor is xemacs,
  you'd type "xemacs /etc/rc.d/rc.local", then add the "setserial" command
  line.
  
  7.Exit, logout, and reboot (not just restart Xserver). You should
  see a line for ISA PnP devices as you boot up. That should do it :)
  
  Thanks to Alan for help via his previous message
  - Original Message -
  From: "Ron Sinclair" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Sent: Tuesday, February 15, 2000 5:53 AM
  Subject: Re: [newbie] Modem jumper settings
  
  
At 01:38 AM 2/15/00 -0500, you wrote:
Is there

Re: [newbie] Modem jumper settings

2000-02-16 Thread Steve Leseman

Hi - I followed your instructions for getting Plug  Play to work for my 
PnP USR modem, and everything went as you laidout, until I rebooted. In red 
text, it roughly said, "don't know what to do with start dependent 
functions no action taken can't parse isapnp.conf... around line 64 
or priority acceptable". It was only on the screen for a brief amount of 
time so I might not have it typed out exactly right, but it's close. Here's 
what the section of the isapnp.conf file I modified looks like:

start dependent functions: priority acceptable
# logical device decodes 16 bit io address lines
minimum io base address 0x03e8
maximum io base address 0x03e8
# io base alignment 8 bytes
number of io addresses required: 8
(io (size 8) (base 0x03e8))
# IRQ 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 10, 11, 12, or 15.
IRQ 2
high true, edge sensitive interrupt (by default)
(int 0 (IRQ 2 (mode + E)))

and the line I added to the end of the rc.local file reads:

setserial dev/ttyS2 port 0x3e8 irq 2 spd_vhi autoconfig

I really appreciate any further help! I've been trying to get it working 
for over 2 hours tonight alone! The strange thing about it though, is that 
before my computer was upgraded the same modem worked fine in the same 
version of Mandrake (6.0). But the shop installed it back in a different 
slot, and now it is on COM 3 (it was COM 2 before). Thanks!!!


At 11:02 AM 2/15/00 -0500, you wrote:
For all you with pnp modem problems, this is how I got my usr 56k internal
ISA modem to work pnp:

1.Type "/sbin/pnpdump  /etc/isapnp.conf" ##this loads info on your
ISA PnP board(s) into the appropriate .conf file.

2.Type "/sbin/isapnp /etc/isapnp.conf"  ##this makes your existing
ISA PnP configuration active.

3.  open your isapnp.conf file.  You will have to remove the comment line
from a couple of the resources listed, depending on how you want to set it
up.  Half way down the file you'll see a comment that says multiple choice
time.
You have to choose what IRQ and com you want to use.  Com1=0x3f8,
Com2=0x2f8,
Com3=0x3e8, Com4=0x2e8.  Here is an example of what I uncommented:
# Start dependent functions: priority preferred

# Fixed IO base address 0x02f8

# Number of IO addresses required: 8

(IO 0 (SIZE 8) (BASE 0x02f8))

# IRQ 3.

# High true, edge sensitive interrupt (by default)

(INT 0 (IRQ 3 (MODE +E)))

This put me on Com2 IRQ 3.  After you know what com port and irq you set it
to,
you can go onto the next step

3.Type "setserial /dev/ttySx port y irq z spd_vhi autoconfig"
##notation is as follows: "x" is your COMport, with 0=COM1, 1=COM2,
2=COM3, 3=COM4; "y" is the standard (or defined) address of that port,
e.g. 0x3e8; "z" is the interrupt used by that port, usually 4 or 3;
thus, if your modem is on COM1 with a standard address  IRQ, the line
would read "setserial /dev/ttyS0 port 0x3f8 irq 4 spd_vhi autoconfig" .
Oh, yes:"spd_vhi" is optional, I'd advise using it with a 56k modem,
mine runs faster with it, but you could leave it off without a problem.

4.Type "rm /dev/modem"  ##you may get a "not found" message, which
is fine; if a /dev/modem" is found, you'll be asked to confirm this
removal, type "y" to proceed.

5.Type "ln -s /dev/ttySx /dev/modem"  ##this establishes the linkage
needed for your modem, not essential, but conventional; again, "x" here
is the same as "x" in item 3 above.

6.With a text editor, open your "/rc.local" file, add the
"setserial" command defined in item 3 above at the end of the file, save
the file and exit the editor. ##For example, if your editor is xemacs,
you'd type "xemacs /etc/rc.d/rc.local", then add the "setserial" command
line.

7.Exit, logout, and reboot (not just restart Xserver). You should
see a line for ISA PnP devices as you boot up. That should do it :)

Thanks to Alan for help via his previous message
- Original Message -
From: "Ron Sinclair" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, February 15, 2000 5:53 AM
Subject: Re: [newbie] Modem jumper settings


  At 01:38 AM 2/15/00 -0500, you wrote:
  Is there a way to get linux to detect my USR internal 56k modem when the
  cards jumpers are set to PnP?
  Right now I have to set the jumpers to PnP to work with windows and set
  the jumpers to com2 to get it to work with Linux.
 
  Hi,
  Could you let me know if you get any answers to your PNP problem?  I'm
  having the exact same problem.
 
  Thanks,
 
 
  Ron Sinclair
  AKA NipponDSM
  __
  ICN 3765104
  http://members.tripod.com/~WIGGLIT/page2.html
  http://www.dsm.org
 



[newbie] Modem jumper settings

2000-02-15 Thread Donald Carpenter

Is there a way to get linux to detect my USR internal 56k modem when the
cards jumpers are set to PnP?
Right now I have to set the jumpers to PnP to work with windows and set
the jumpers to com2 to get it to work with Linux.




Re: [newbie] Modem jumper settings

2000-02-15 Thread Ron Sinclair

At 01:38 AM 2/15/00 -0500, you wrote:
Is there a way to get linux to detect my USR internal 56k modem when the
cards jumpers are set to PnP?
Right now I have to set the jumpers to PnP to work with windows and set
the jumpers to com2 to get it to work with Linux.

Hi, 
Could you let me know if you get any answers to your PNP problem?  I'm
having the exact same problem.

Thanks,


Ron Sinclair
AKA NipponDSM
__
ICN 3765104
http://members.tripod.com/~WIGGLIT/page2.html
http://www.dsm.org



Re: [newbie] Modem jumper settings

2000-02-15 Thread Brent Timmer

For all you with pnp modem problems, this is how I got my usr 56k internal
ISA modem to work pnp:

1.Type "/sbin/pnpdump  /etc/isapnp.conf" ##this loads info on your
ISA PnP board(s) into the appropriate .conf file.

2.Type "/sbin/isapnp /etc/isapnp.conf"  ##this makes your existing
ISA PnP configuration active.

3.  open your isapnp.conf file.  You will have to remove the comment line
from a couple of the resources listed, depending on how you want to set it
up.  Half way down the file you'll see a comment that says multiple choice
time.
You have to choose what IRQ and com you want to use.  Com1=0x3f8,
Com2=0x2f8,
Com3=0x3e8, Com4=0x2e8.  Here is an example of what I uncommented:
# Start dependent functions: priority preferred

# Fixed IO base address 0x02f8

# Number of IO addresses required: 8

(IO 0 (SIZE 8) (BASE 0x02f8))

# IRQ 3.

# High true, edge sensitive interrupt (by default)

(INT 0 (IRQ 3 (MODE +E)))

This put me on Com2 IRQ 3.  After you know what com port and irq you set it
to,
you can go onto the next step

3.Type "setserial /dev/ttySx port y irq z spd_vhi autoconfig"
##notation is as follows: "x" is your COMport, with 0=COM1, 1=COM2,
2=COM3, 3=COM4; "y" is the standard (or defined) address of that port,
e.g. 0x3e8; "z" is the interrupt used by that port, usually 4 or 3;
thus, if your modem is on COM1 with a standard address  IRQ, the line
would read "setserial /dev/ttyS0 port 0x3f8 irq 4 spd_vhi autoconfig" .
Oh, yes:"spd_vhi" is optional, I'd advise using it with a 56k modem,
mine runs faster with it, but you could leave it off without a problem.

4.Type "rm /dev/modem"  ##you may get a "not found" message, which
is fine; if a /dev/modem" is found, you'll be asked to confirm this
removal, type "y" to proceed.

5.Type "ln -s /dev/ttySx /dev/modem"  ##this establishes the linkage
needed for your modem, not essential, but conventional; again, "x" here
is the same as "x" in item 3 above.

6.With a text editor, open your "/rc.local" file, add the
"setserial" command defined in item 3 above at the end of the file, save
the file and exit the editor. ##For example, if your editor is xemacs,
you'd type "xemacs /etc/rc.d/rc.local", then add the "setserial" command
line.

7.Exit, logout, and reboot (not just restart Xserver). You should
see a line for ISA PnP devices as you boot up. That should do it :)

Thanks to Alan for help via his previous message
- Original Message -
From: "Ron Sinclair" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, February 15, 2000 5:53 AM
Subject: Re: [newbie] Modem jumper settings


 At 01:38 AM 2/15/00 -0500, you wrote:
 Is there a way to get linux to detect my USR internal 56k modem when the
 cards jumpers are set to PnP?
 Right now I have to set the jumpers to PnP to work with windows and set
 the jumpers to com2 to get it to work with Linux.

 Hi,
 Could you let me know if you get any answers to your PNP problem?  I'm
 having the exact same problem.

 Thanks,


 Ron Sinclair
 AKA NipponDSM
 __
 ICN 3765104
 http://members.tripod.com/~WIGGLIT/page2.html
 http://www.dsm.org





Re: [newbie] Modem jumper settings

2000-02-15 Thread Ty C.Mixon

Your best bet is to uninstall the modem in Windows.  Then run a file 
called wmregdel.exe from the Win98 CD.  

Shutdown the computer
Jumper the modem for Com2
Restart the computer
Install the modem when it's detected in Windows
Then you should have no more worries.

Ty
-- 
Ty Mixon
e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
ICQ:26147713

 Original Message 

On 2/15/00, 3:53:11 AM, Ron Sinclair [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote 
regarding Re: [newbie] Modem jumper settings:


 At 01:38 AM 2/15/00 -0500, you wrote:
 Is there a way to get linux to detect my USR internal 56k modem when 
the
 cards jumpers are set to PnP?
 Right now I have to set the jumpers to PnP to work with windows and 
set
 the jumpers to com2 to get it to work with Linux.

 Hi,
 Could you let me know if you get any answers to your PNP problem?  I'm
 having the exact same problem.

 Thanks,


 Ron Sinclair
 AKA NipponDSM
 __
 ICN 3765104
 http://members.tripod.com/~WIGGLIT/page2.html
 http://www.dsm.org





Re: [newbie] Modem jumper settings

2000-02-15 Thread G_REEPER

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On Tue, 15 Feb 2000, you wrote:
 At 01:38 AM 2/15/00 -0500, you wrote:
 Is there a way to get linux to detect my USR internal 56k modem when the
 cards jumpers are set to PnP?
 Right now I have to set the jumpers to PnP to work with windows and set
 the jumpers to com2 to get it to work with Linux.
 
 Hi, 
 Could you let me know if you get any answers to your PNP problem?  I'm
 having the exact same problem.
 
 Thanks,
 
 
 Ron Sinclair
 AKA NipponDSM
 __
 ICN 3765104
 http://members.tripod.com/~WIGGLIT/page2.html
 http://www.dsm.org

Try turning off plug and play os in the BIOS. That sometimes does the trick
with linux to see the card
Steven
 -- 
LIFE'S LAWS  
If at first you don't succeed, skydiving is not for you.



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