Mail Archives: opendos/2004/02/14/20:07:12
On 14 Feb 2004 at 21:56, Lindner-Thalmaessing AT t-online wrote:
> On 07.02.2004 shadow AT shadowgard DOT com wrote:
> > save it into the non-volatile RAM in the modem so I can just do an ATZ
> > and have the modem be set the way I want it.
>
> What happens then, if I switch the modem's power off?
The stuff stored in the modem's non-volatile RAM stay until you write
over it, Which requires using the AT&W command.
> > the "time to wait for carrier" setting in any program needs to be set to
> > 60 seconds. And if there's a setting for how long to wait for logon to
> > complete before timing out, that needs to be set to 90 seconds. I was
> > having trouble with that on my uucp connections. I had to find the (well
> > hidden!) setting for time to wait for transfer to start and increase it.
>
> My cfg is as follows:
<snip>
> Any proposal, what to change?
Didn't see anything that needed changing. Looks like you need to work
on the settings for the modem.
> > Before loading my mailer I run a batch file:
> > COMMSET.BAT
>
> Must I also change my $baud in my cfg, when running your commset.bat?
Nope, because the Lock command will prevent the program from changing
the baud rate anyway. Unless it is ill behaved enough to mess with
the UART directly.
> > You'll want to pay attention to the line that says Chip Type. If it lists
> > anything other than 16550A, you may want to replace your serial port
> > hardware. If it lists 8250, you *definitely* want to replace it!
>
> It reports: "It is a 16550A SIO Chip."
That's good.
--
Leonard Erickson (aka shadow)
shadow at krypton dot rain dot com
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