: Tuesday, May 25, 2004 6:17 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [newbie] dev file question
--- Grant [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
--- Mikkel L. Ellertson [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
Grant wrote:
To get it back, try:
rm /dev/tts/LTO
rm /dev/modem
modprobe lt_serial
--- Mikkel L. Ellertson [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
Grant wrote:
To get it back, try:
rm /dev/tts/LTO
rm /dev/modem
modprobe lt_serial
ln -s /dev/modem /dev/tts/LT0
Thanks a lot for getting back to me. I have
removed
those symlinks and restarted Linux and I still
have no
LT0
--- Grant [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
--- Mikkel L. Ellertson [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
Grant wrote:
To get it back, try:
rm /dev/tts/LTO
rm /dev/modem
modprobe lt_serial
ln -s /dev/modem /dev/tts/LT0
Thanks a lot for getting back to me. I have
removed
those
Grant wrote:
Hello! I had my win modem working with penggy to dial
up to AOL, but every time I restarted the computer I
had to:
rm /dev/modem
because there was a different symlink in there, and
then:
ln -s /dev/modem /dev/tts/LT0
This worked great for a while, but yesterday things
were acting
I'm sorry to post about this again, but I'm really
confused with this and have no idea what to do.
Should I try reinstalling the winmodem?
- Grant
--- Grant [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello! I had my win modem working with penggy to
dial
up to AOL, but every time I restarted the computer I
Hello! I had my win modem working with penggy to dial
up to AOL, but every time I restarted the computer I
had to:
rm /dev/modem
because there was a different symlink in there, and
then:
ln -s /dev/modem /dev/tts/LT0
This worked great for a while, but yesterday things
were acting strange and