Quoting Douglas Royds <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> Ross Hamblin wrote:
> > If it is our XH1145 PCMCIA Modem (
> http://www.dse.co.nz/cgi-bin/dse.storefront/en/product/XH1148 ), it is
> an Intel 566x chipset. The command to show the connect speed is ATW3 to
> report speed only, or ATW4 to report sp
On Fri, 2005-05-27 at 18:43 +1200, Douglas Royds wrote:
> >>Where do I configure the init string?
> >
> > what are you using software-wise to connect with?
>
> So far just the Gnome "Network Settings" tool. Under Modem Connection
> it
> says "The interface ppp0 is active".
>
> In the syslog, th
On Fri, 2005-05-27 at 18:43 +1200, Douglas Royds wrote:
>
> Nick Rout wrote:
> >>Nick Rout wrote:
> >>>They may give a hint as to the init strings to use. in fact i have read
> >>>ahead of you - try this as the init string:
> >>>
> >>>AT &F E0 V1 W2 &D2 &C1 S0=0 -C0
> >>
> >>I had done so, but had
Nick Rout wrote:
Nick Rout wrote:
They may give a hint as to the init strings to use. in fact i have read
ahead of you - try this as the init string:
AT &F E0 V1 W2 &D2 &C1 S0=0 -C0
I had done so, but hadn't spotted the init string!
Where do I configure the init string?
what are you usin
On Fri, 2005-05-27 at 18:29 +1200, Douglas Royds wrote:
>
> Nick Rout wrote:
> > take a look at the .inf files, they are text, but not exactly plain :)
> >
> > They may give a hint as to the init strings to use. in fact i have read
> > ahead of you - try this as the init string:
> >
> > AT &F E0
Nick Rout wrote:
take a look at the .inf files, they are text, but not exactly plain :)
They may give a hint as to the init strings to use. in fact i have read
ahead of you - try this as the init string:
AT &F E0 V1 W2 &D2 &C1 S0=0 -C0
I had done so, but hadn't spotted the init string!
Whe
DSE still have the windows driver files for download. 8K only so even at
the speed you are getting it won't take long :)
these are straight .inf files, which leads me to believe that this is
not a winmodem - good news!
take a look at the .inf files, they are text, but not exactly plain :)
They m
Ross Hamblin wrote:
If it is our XH1145 PCMCIA Modem (
http://www.dse.co.nz/cgi-bin/dse.storefront/en/product/XH1148 ), it is an Intel
566x chipset. The command to show the connect speed is ATW3 to report speed
only, or ATW4 to report speed and some other info (sorry don't have one handy
to
Douglas Royds wrote:
I plugged in a DSE 56k PCMCIA modem, Ubuntu (Hoary) recognised it OK,
and I successfully dialled up, but only got about 14kb/s - dismal.
Suggestions?
I solved this by ignoring the "Network" GUI configurator (stop it from
dialling automatically), and opening a terminal
Appending the string debug on a new line in /etc/ppp/options should produce
a more verbose logging output.
Cheers Ross Drummond
On Fri, 27 May 2005 09:28, Douglas Royds wrote:
> I plugged in a DSE 56k PCMCIA modem, Ubuntu (Hoary) recognised it OK, and I
> successfully dialled up, but only got
> -Original Message-
> From: Nick Rout [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Friday, 27 May 2005 10:31 a.m.
> To: linux-users@it.canterbury.ac.nz
> Subject: Re: PCMCIA modem very slow
>
>
>
> On Fri, 27 May 2005 10:17:01 +1200
> Michael wrote:
>
On Fri, 27 May 2005 09:28, Douglas Royds wrote:
> I plugged in a DSE 56k PCMCIA modem, Ubuntu (Hoary) recognised it OK, and I
> successfully dialled up, but only got about 14kb/s - dismal.
>
> Suggestions?
Tell us what chipset it uses, or even the DSE stock number.
--
C. S.
On Fri, 27 May 2005 10:17:01 +1200
Michael wrote:
> Could it be that this is a Conexant based modem and the Ubuntu supplied
> driver
> is the free version (limited to 14.4Kbps data). See here:
>
> http://www.linuxant.com/drivers/index.php#about
>
> dmesg might tell you something about the mo
Could it be that this is a Conexant based modem and the Ubuntu supplied driver
is the free version (limited to 14.4Kbps data). See here:
http://www.linuxant.com/drivers/index.php#about
dmesg might tell you something about the modem to
Just a thought, don't forget to report back your success or
pppstats (command line) will tell you the speed that packets are
actually flowing at, use the option -w 1
I am sure that there are commands to put in your modem init string to
report back the speed as well as CONNECT - so the line will read
something like
CONNECT 33600
something like W1 or W2 i
No, no info about the speed in the syslog, regrettably. It just says
"CONNECT", and that's all.
Is there any analysis tool that I can run? I couldn't find anything last
night that would actually tell me the modem speed, I just worked it out by
downloading a web-page and seeing how much data wa
I've seen this issue with softmodems (In my cases running debian based
distros, fixed with a patch) .. does Hoary see it as a 56K capable modem ?
regards
Paul
Nick Rout wrote:
grep CONNECT /var/log/messages
I think this should give you the connect speed as reported by the modem
on connection
grep CONNECT /var/log/messages
I think this should give you the connect speed as reported by the modem
on connection to the ISP's modem.
On Fri, 27 May 2005 09:28:58 +1200
Douglas Royds wrote:
> I plugged in a DSE 56k PCMCIA modem, Ubuntu (Hoary) recognised it OK, and I
> successfully dialled u
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