Jim Snyder wrote:
> Hi
>
> I was able to load Mandrake 9.0 on my Toshiba Satellite
> 1805-s204 and everything works well except that I cannot
> use my internal modem yet. The internal networking card is
> working fine. I am suspecting an IRQ conflict or the need
> to edit a file somewhere. Can some
On Saturday 02 Nov 2002 1:16 am, Jim Snyder wrote:
> Hi
>
> I was able to load Mandrake 9.0 on my Toshiba Satellite 1805-s204 and
> everything works well except that I cannot use my internal modem yet. The
> internal networking card is working fine. I am suspecting an IRQ conflict
> or the need to
Hi
I was able to load Mandrake 9.0 on my Toshiba Satellite 1805-s204 and
everything works well except that I cannot use my internal modem yet. The
internal networking card is working fine. I am suspecting an IRQ conflict or
the need to edit a file somewhere. Can someone guide me through this
proce
On Monday 20 May 2002 09:20, you wrote:
> On Monday 20 May 2002 08:49, Nashib .J. wrote:
> > Can someone help me to change the modem under Mandrake linux.I got
> > a connexant modem and linux detected a rockwell modem instead.
>
> AFAIK, they use the same chipset, so it shouldn't make any differen
On Mon, 20 May 2002 17:49, Nashib .J. wrote:
> Can someone help me to change the modem under Mandrake linux.I got a
> connexant modem and linux detected a rockwell modem instead.
Rockwell was bought out by (or renamed) Conexant.
Michael
Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft?
Go
On Monday 20 May 2002 08:49, Nashib .J. wrote:
> Can someone help me to change the modem under Mandrake linux.I got
> a connexant modem and linux detected a rockwell modem instead.
AFAIK, they use the same chipset, so it shouldn't make any difference.
Sir Robin
--
"No discipline is ever necess
Can someone help me to change the modem under
Mandrake linux.I got a connexant modem and linux detected a rockwell modem
instead.
Does if have jumpers on board?
It'll be alot easier to configure if you set it to a specific com port
like COM3, and maybe IRQ4, if it won't conflict with your serial devices.
I've had problems with plug and play so I disabled it.
If you're running a dual-boot machine look at its COM, IRQ and P
quaylar wrote:
> At 10:48 27.11.2001 +, you wrote:
> >Can someone guide me step by step in simple language please how I
> >install a US Robotics 33.6 Sportster Modem on 8.0?
> >
> >Many thanks
> >
> >Gordon
>
> gordon,
>
> try out this excellent guide :
>
> http://www.mandrakeuser.org/docs/co
At 10:48 27.11.2001 +, you wrote:
>Can someone guide me step by step in simple language please how I
>install a US Robotics 33.6 Sportster Modem on 8.0?
>
>Many thanks
>
>Gordon
gordon,
try out this excellent guide :
http://www.mandrakeuser.org/docs/connect/cppp.html
hth
--qu
>Want
Can someone guide me step by step in simple language please how I
install a US Robotics 33.6 Sportster Modem on 8.0?
Many thanks
Gordon
Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft?
Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com
By drag a little, you mean? On a modem connection it depends on
the signal thruput for lack of the right
technical term. If the line is noisey, i.e. static or poor connection,
or there is a heavy load on one of the
net servers you are connecting thru, then you will see things moving a
b
Do I need to run some sort of setup on my modem? I've got a Viking PCMCIA
modem. I got kppp to work last night and was able to get on the net. But it
seemed to drag a little. I've got the throughput set at 115200. Is there
some sort of set up or driver install that needs to be done?
Lon Lent
we're not going to ask you to disable com 2...
at least, not yet...we just want to make sure of certain settings.
Murray wrote:
>
> >>knowing what brand of bios you have would be helpful
> too. Award? AMI? Phoenix? Other?<<
>
> It's a Phoenix, couldn't see a date or version number.
>
> And
- Original Message -
From: "bascule" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Saturday, June 10, 2000 11:12 AM
Subject: Re: [newbie]Modem Setup
> if you truly have never modified anything in your motherboards bios
> before then perhaps before you try to do s
the motherboard bios reference to com2 refers to the 'onboard'
motherboard com port, if not disabled then it will conflict with any
other comports that use the same settings, isa modems that are not
winmodems will install as an extra comport as well as a modem,
bascule
> And just out of curiosi
if you truly have never modified anything in your motherboards bios
before then perhaps before you try to do so you should check to see if
your modem has any jumpers or switches on it to set it to a different
irq/io range/com port, as an isa modem it may well do so, i have a
generic isa modem that
On Fri, 9 Jun 2000, Murray wrote:
>>>knowing what brand of bios you have would be helpful
>too. Award? AMI? Phoenix? Other?<<
>
>It's a Phoenix, couldn't see a date or version number.
>
>And just out of curiosity, it just occurred to me: if the modem is *on*
>COM2, how will disabling COM2 he
No because on most COM ports if the system is initializing COM2 as a device,
it won't look for anything else, and since an external modem has it's own
communications board in it, it conflicts with the system set COM 2 and the
modem communications board in it. It is typical to disable a COM port t
>>knowing what brand of bios you have would be helpful
too. Award? AMI? Phoenix? Other?<<
It's a Phoenix, couldn't see a date or version number.
And just out of curiosity, it just occurred to me: if the modem is *on*
COM2, how will disabling COM2 help? Wouldn't disabling COM1 or 3
perhaps
knowing what brand of bios you have would be helpful
too. Award? AMI? Phoenix? Other?
--- KompuKit <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I wouldn't fool with the BIOS unless you KNOW
> what you are doing...
>
> you can really mess up things...bigtime...
> what you should do...is this:
>
> if you kno
I wouldn't fool with the BIOS unless you KNOW
what you are doing...
you can really mess up things...bigtime...
what you should do...is this:
if you know HOW to get into your BIOS settings...on startup
(either pressing the DELETE key,or pressing the F1 key,or pressing
Ctrl-Alt-Del keys all at on
Micheal,
>>I hate to sound like a dirty cd but did you try
disabling com2 in the
BIOS? 2f8 +irq3=com2.<<
I've never modified anything in BIOS before, how would I go about doing
that?
Thanks,
Murray
Murray,
I hate to sound like a dirty cd but did you try disabling com2 in the
BIOS? 2f8 +irq3=com2.
-michael-
Hello Everyone,
By way of introduction, my name is Murray and I just installed
Linux-Mandrake 6.0 (boy, do I ever feel out of date!) about a week ago.
I specifically replaced my old WinModem with a proper modem for this
install, but now I can't seem to get it up and running. The (new) modem
is
First, you can use modemtool to tell Linux where to find your modem, but you
must know to which COM port the modem is conected (modemtool will show you the
DOS equivalents on the same line with the Linux designations).
If your modem is a PnP device, it may not be using the same resources as it
do
Sevatio Octavio wrote:
>
> I have a USRobotics pnp ISA int modem. My objective is to be able to dial into an
>ISP.
>
> Now, I've gone over a pile of word-gravel (a.k.a. HOWTOs) and I don't want to know
>what a modem is or what a com port is or the
> history of so and so...
>
> Where can I go
I have a USRobotics pnp ISA int modem. My objective is to be able to dial into an ISP.
Now, I've gone over a pile of word-gravel (a.k.a. HOWTOs) and I don't want to know
what a modem is or what a com port is or the
history of so and so...
Where can I go to get the straight answer on how to get
Try : modemtool
jsm
Steve Winston wrote:
> i think you can with linux.conf. i didn't seem to have any trouble, but
> I have had other problesm
> --- James Caldwell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > I heard that to setup your modem you have to go to
> > Gnome. Could someone
> > please tell me how t
29 matches
Mail list logo