Results 1 to 4 of 4

Thread: Dial-Up, Modem, and stuff.

  1. #1

    Dial-Up, Modem, and stuff.

    Well hello there.

    I'm having a bit of a problem. I have Knoppix 5.1.1 that runs from the disc. Fist of all, lets get some specs:

    eMachines W3118
    AMD Sempron Processor 3100+
    1.81 GHz, 992 MB of RAM
    Windows XP Home w/ SP2 + all current updates
    PCI Softdata Fax Modem with SmartCP (PCI bus 4, device 7, function 0) Manufactured by CXT (56K Dial-Up)

    Ok then, so I've skimmed around Knoppix and I see where I create the new network connection...the wizard doesn't work, so when I try to set it up manually, it won't let me enter the Username and Password for my ISP. I don't understand why. It won't let me type in those two entry fields at all! It lets me create it and all that, but there's no way of typing in the info. I checked to make sure the keyboard was working on Knoppix, and sure enough, it was. Sooo, I don't know what to do. I tried the wizard again....and realized that I can't use it. It asks me to choose a country and my country isn't listed, US.

    I'd greatly appreciate the help. I know I'm a chick, but I know my way around the computer. Please, lemmie know what you think is going on...is the modem not compatible? *sigh*

  2. #2
    Administrator Site Admin-
    Join Date
    Apr 2003
    Location
    USA
    Posts
    5,441

    Re: Dial-Up, Modem, and stuff.

    Quote Originally Posted by PrincessMisery
    .....is the modem not compatible? *sigh*
    I don't know the full answer, but the short answer is that many Winmodems are unfortunately not compatable with Linux. Some are, but Winmodems require special DSP software drivers writen for them. Each chip set needs it's own DSP software driver. And most hardware makers only provide drivers for Windows, many chip makers will not even release chip specs so that drivers cane be written for Linux, thus the lack of support. If you want to keep working on this goal you would be best off to determine what chip set you modem uses (often available in the device manager section of the system part of the control panel) and do some searching to see if Linux has support for it. Otherwise consider a true hardware modem, or join the 21st century and go high speed.

  3. #3

    Re: Dial-Up, Modem, and stuff.

    Quote Originally Posted by Harry Kuhman
    join the 21st century and go high speed.
    I can't. No one will come out here with high speed. And I don't believe we could afford satellite. Either way, yes, I will check more on the modem. I tried again lastnight...now it says that my modem is busy? I get two messages...either it says it's busy or that there isn't one installed (when I change the setting to /dev/modem). But when it's between /dev/ttyS1 and S3, it tells me it's busy. Hmph.

  4. #4
    Junior Member
    Join Date
    Mar 2007
    Location
    In the shadow of Mount St. Helens
    Posts
    3
    I have the same problem, and I discovered that you can get an external modem on eBay for less than 20 bucks (shipping included). So many people are getting broadband, dialup modems are selling real cheap.

Similar Threads

  1. dial-up serial modem help?
    By Lin-X in forum Networking
    Replies: 3
    Last Post: 04-03-2006, 11:42 PM
  2. Modem has to dial in twice to work?
    By brianinmaine in forum Networking
    Replies: 0
    Last Post: 03-26-2004, 08:45 PM
  3. Dial-up Modem Issues. Keeps saying "Initializing Modem&
    By panthrax in forum Hardware & Booting
    Replies: 2
    Last Post: 12-11-2003, 11:39 PM
  4. Dial-up modem advice?
    By VeeDubb in forum The Lounge
    Replies: 6
    Last Post: 06-03-2003, 02:41 AM
  5. Replies: 2
    Last Post: 05-14-2003, 10:29 PM

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  


IBM Power S822 8284-22A 12SFF Power8 3.89GHz 6Core 64GB RAM No HDD Server System picture

IBM Power S822 8284-22A 12SFF Power8 3.89GHz 6Core 64GB RAM No HDD Server System

$359.99



1U IBM x3550 M5 4 Bay SFF SAS3 Server 2x E5-2683 V3 28 Core 128GB DDR4 2x Tray picture

1U IBM x3550 M5 4 Bay SFF SAS3 Server 2x E5-2683 V3 28 Core 128GB DDR4 2x Tray

$318.00



IBM Power S822 12-Bay Server System Power8 Core 3.42Ghz DVD-Rom Drive 64GB No HD picture

IBM Power S822 12-Bay Server System Power8 Core 3.42Ghz DVD-Rom Drive 64GB No HD

$399.99



IBM Server System X3100 M4 | Xeon @ 3.10 Ghz | 8GB | 250GB HDD No OS (IG-PC26) picture

IBM Server System X3100 M4 | Xeon @ 3.10 Ghz | 8GB | 250GB HDD No OS (IG-PC26)

$101.66



IBM System x3550 M3 Dual Intel Xeon X5650 @2.67GHz 32GB RAM No HDD picture

IBM System x3550 M3 Dual Intel Xeon X5650 @2.67GHz 32GB RAM No HDD

$84.50



IBM Power8 S822L 20-Core 3.42GHz 256Gb 1.2Tb 40G Elastic Storage Server 5148-22L picture

IBM Power8 S822L 20-Core 3.42GHz 256Gb 1.2Tb 40G Elastic Storage Server 5148-22L

$599.95



IBM 5362 Server  System/36 power on test only picture

IBM 5362 Server System/36 power on test only

$1299.00



IBM System x3250 M4 Server Intel Xeon E3-1220 3.10GHz 8GB RAM No HDDs picture

IBM System x3250 M4 Server Intel Xeon E3-1220 3.10GHz 8GB RAM No HDDs

$60.56



IBM Lenovo X3650 M5 2U 8x 2.5” CTO Rack Server – 2x HS, 2x 750W picture

IBM Lenovo X3650 M5 2U 8x 2.5” CTO Rack Server – 2x HS, 2x 750W

$199.00



IBM x3650 M4 2x Xeon E5-2670 2.6ghz 16-Core / 64GB / M5110e / 2x PSU picture

IBM x3650 M4 2x Xeon E5-2670 2.6ghz 16-Core / 64GB / M5110e / 2x PSU

$229.99