As long at the computer itself can service the interrupts and the device has enough buffer to handle the high bit rate then a high rate is fine. As with anything, it all comes down to what is waiting for what. anything lower than 19.2 and the modem will always be waiting. anything higher than 38.4 and the computer will be waiting. With a CDMA modem, since they don't send messages the same way, a little higher rate could be better. Maybe 38.4 and 57.6. This is a guess though since I don't use the CDMA versions.
At 115K rate though you should probably make sure you turn on either soft or hard flow control since the cheaper serial modems have pretty wimpy buffers in general. The higher end versions and USB versions seem to be better in this regard. Again. This is an casual observation and not a something I have specifically tested for. As Far as TMobile is concerned... where do they have CDMA? Unless you mean the 3G variety I thought their entire network in Aorth America was GSM. On Feb 22, 6:16 am, Alex <[email protected]> wrote: > Is there ever any disadvantage to using the highest baud rate > available? > > (T-mobile USA has CDMA as well; could be that using that?) > > On Feb 20, 9:39 pm, Thanasis <[email protected]> wrote: > > > 11 messages per minute??? > > Is this on a pure GSM channel? No GPRS? > > > On Feb 20, 6:48 pm,nxnlvz<[email protected]> wrote: > > > > = 11.6 messages per minute -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "SMSLib User Group" group. To post to this group, send email to [email protected]. To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected]. For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/smslib?hl=en.
