• Anyone hack HSF Winmodem (thinkpadtseries) into kernels newer than 2.6?

    From none) (William Pechter@21:1/5 to All on Sat Jul 9 02:43:29 2016
    XPost: alt.os.linux.debian, alt.os.linux.ubuntu, alt.os.linux.suse
    XPost: alt.os.linux.redhat, comp.os.linux.setup

    Has anyone got Winmodem (ConexantHSF) support hacked in to any
    linux kernel newer than 2.6?

    I'd like to get Ubuntu supporting it on a Thinkpad T61, but I'd
    consider other LTS versions of linux like Open Suse or Debian (I
    want to retire the ugly old 19200modem I've got in the PCcard slot
    which dates from my IBM days on OS/2).

    I really need to get the modem working as well as dual gigabit
    ethernets which takes up my pccard slot.

    I could go USB but was just wondering?

    Thanks...

    Bill
    pechter-at-gmail.com

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  • From William Unruh@21:1/5 to pechter@t61 on Sat Jul 9 03:00:31 2016
    XPost: alt.os.linux.debian, alt.os.linux.ubuntu, alt.os.linux.suse
    XPost: alt.os.linux.redhat, comp.os.linux.setup

    On 2016-07-09, pechter@t61.(none) (William Pechter) <pechter@t61> wrote:
    Has anyone got Winmodem (ConexantHSF) support hacked in to any
    linux kernel newer than 2.6?

    You could probably buy a used USRobotics etc modem for $5 and not use a
    stupid winmodem.


    I'd like to get Ubuntu supporting it on a Thinkpad T61, but I'd
    consider other LTS versions of linux like Open Suse or Debian (I
    want to retire the ugly old 19200modem I've got in the PCcard slot
    which dates from my IBM days on OS/2).

    I really need to get the modem working as well as dual gigabit
    ethernets which takes up my pccard slot.

    o
    I could go USB but was just wondering?
    Or that.
    At $5/hr coding to get it working, you should be able to buy a new
    computer, never mind a modem
    Do you really thing Gigabit never mind dual gigabit would work? I am not
    sure that the bus is fast enough on such an ancient machine.



    Thanks...

    Bill
    pechter-at-gmail.com

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  • From Johann Klammer@21:1/5 to none William Pechter on Sat Jul 9 18:57:48 2016
    XPost: alt.os.linux.debian

    On 07/09/2016 04:43 AM, none William Pechter wrote:
    Has anyone got Winmodem (ConexantHSF) support hacked in to any
    linux kernel newer than 2.6?

    I'd like to get Ubuntu supporting it on a Thinkpad T61, but I'd
    consider other LTS versions of linux like Open Suse or Debian (I
    want to retire the ugly old 19200modem I've got in the PCcard slot
    which dates from my IBM days on OS/2).

    I really need to get the modem working as well as dual gigabit
    ethernets which takes up my pccard slot.

    I could go USB but was just wondering?

    Thanks...

    Bill
    pechter-at-gmail.com

    I think there were 3rd party kernel modules for those around,
    but they were speed limited....

    <http://www.thinkwiki.org/wiki/Conexant_HSF_modem_drivers>

    tried any of those?

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  • From William Pechter@21:1/5 to unruh@invalid.ca on Tue Jul 12 18:16:53 2016
    XPost: alt.os.linux.debian, alt.os.linux.ubuntu, alt.os.linux.suse
    XPost: alt.os.linux.redhat, comp.os.linux.setup

    In article <nlppcf$ehv$1@dont-email.me>,
    William Unruh <unruh@invalid.ca> wrote:
    On 2016-07-09, pechter@t61.(none) (William Pechter) <pechter@t61> wrote:
    Has anyone got Winmodem (ConexantHSF) support hacked in to any
    linux kernel newer than 2.6?

    You could probably buy a used USRobotics etc modem for $5 and not use a >stupid winmodem.


    I'd like to get Ubuntu supporting it on a Thinkpad T61, but I'd
    consider other LTS versions of linux like Open Suse or Debian (I
    want to retire the ugly old 19200modem I've got in the PCcard slot
    which dates from my IBM days on OS/2).

    I really need to get the modem working as well as dual gigabit
    ethernets which takes up my pccard slot.

    o
    I could go USB but was just wondering?
    Or that.
    At $5/hr coding to get it working, you should be able to buy a new
    computer, never mind a modem
    Do you really thing Gigabit never mind dual gigabit would work? I am not
    sure that the bus is fast enough on such an ancient machine.



    Thanks...

    Bill
    pechter-at-gmail.com

    Can I get it into a loaded T61 laptop? I guess USB could be used for the modem, but ugh.

    Hard to get it INSIDE the laptop. PCCard slots are already in use. External
    is possible but not as nice when you're looking for portability.

    I've got Telebit Trailblazers and 56k externals galore. Not too light and small.

    Bill
    --
    --
    Digital had it then. Don't you wish you could buy it now!
    pechter-at-gmail.com http://xkcd.com/705/

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  • From Mike Easter@21:1/5 to William Pechter on Tue Jul 12 17:43:55 2016
    XPost: alt.os.linux.debian, alt.os.linux.ubuntu, alt.os.linux.suse
    XPost: alt.os.linux.redhat, comp.os.linux.setup

    William Pechter wrote:
    External is possible but not as nice when you're looking for
    portability.

    You'll have better luck trying to get the internal winmodem to work if
    you use the scanmodem tool.

    http://al.howardknight.net/msgid.cgi?ID=146837055300

    Between Puppy and the scanmodem tool, you may be able to get the
    winmodem handled;




    --
    Mike Easter

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  • From Michael Black@21:1/5 to William Unruh on Tue Jul 12 19:41:00 2016
    XPost: alt.os.linux.debian, alt.os.linux.ubuntu, alt.os.linux.suse
    XPost: alt.os.linux.redhat, comp.os.linux.setup

    On Tue, 12 Jul 2016, William Unruh wrote:

    On 2016-07-12, William Pechter <pechter@pechter.net> wrote:
    In article <nlppcf$ehv$1@dont-email.me>,
    William Unruh <unruh@invalid.ca> wrote:
    On 2016-07-09, pechter@t61.(none) (William Pechter) <pechter@t61> wrote: >>>> Has anyone got Winmodem (ConexantHSF) support hacked in to any
    linux kernel newer than 2.6?

    You could probably buy a used USRobotics etc modem for $5 and not use a
    stupid winmodem.


    I'd like to get Ubuntu supporting it on a Thinkpad T61, but I'd
    consider other LTS versions of linux like Open Suse or Debian (I
    want to retire the ugly old 19200modem I've got in the PCcard slot
    which dates from my IBM days on OS/2).

    I really need to get the modem working as well as dual gigabit
    ethernets which takes up my pccard slot.

    o
    I could go USB but was just wondering?
    Or that.
    At $5/hr coding to get it working, you should be able to buy a new
    computer, never mind a modem
    Do you really thing Gigabit never mind dual gigabit would work? I am not >>> sure that the bus is fast enough on such an ancient machine.



    Thanks...

    Bill
    pechter-at-gmail.com

    Can I get it into a loaded T61 laptop? I guess USB could be used for the
    modem, but ugh.

    Agreed. But then again, how often do you use the modem? Are there any
    ISPs that will even answer a modem call?


    Hard to get it INSIDE the laptop. PCCard slots are already in use. External >> is possible but not as nice when you're looking for portability.

    Well, in some laptops you can open them up and replace the modem.

    I know of at least two posters from various newsgroups who are using
    dialup modems, so they have to have ISPs to do so.

    My ISP still offered dialup when I moved to DSL in October of 2012, and I haven't heard anything to indicate they've stopped. They did seem to be consolidating about a year before that, doing something which I think
    meant moving to a shared modem pool. Suddenly there was a different
    login. But, I think that meant they also offered modem access to a wider geographic area, so if travelling one could get modem access.

    I would add that this is the second oldest local ISP (and the first local
    ISP no longer exists), and they still offer shell access, so they are
    aimed at the old internet hands rather than the new kids who wouldn't know
    what a modem is.

    Michael

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  • From Carlos E.R.@21:1/5 to Michael Black on Wed Jul 13 11:34:14 2016
    XPost: alt.os.linux.debian, alt.os.linux.ubuntu, alt.os.linux.suse
    XPost: alt.os.linux.redhat, comp.os.linux.setup

    On 2016-07-13 01:41, Michael Black wrote:

    I know of at least two posters from various newsgroups who are using
    dialup modems, so they have to have ISPs to do so.

    My ISP still offered dialup when I moved to DSL in October of 2012, and
    I haven't heard anything to indicate they've stopped. They did seem to
    be consolidating about a year before that, doing something which I think meant moving to a shared modem pool. Suddenly there was a different
    login. But, I think that meant they also offered modem access to a
    wider geographic area, so if travelling one could get modem access.

    An ISP can provide dialup access with a single central station for a
    very wide area, (long distance).

    The way it works, the signal is digitized at the entry exchange that
    serves you locally, as for any voice call. Once digitized, the hardware-software that interprets (DSL) the numbers as a modem "tones"
    can be anywhere in the country.

    So I suppose it doesn't harm to keep that hardware in place for the
    small number of users that still use dialup (I have no idea what number
    that will be).

    Yes, it can be a handy way to obtain internet anywhere without
    installation. But instead I used a mobile solution.

    --
    Cheers, Carlos.

    --- news://freenews.netfront.net/ - complaints: news@netfront.net ---

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  • From William Pechter@21:1/5 to unruh@invalid.ca on Fri Jul 15 01:45:09 2016
    XPost: alt.os.linux.debian, alt.os.linux.ubuntu, alt.os.linux.suse
    XPost: alt.os.linux.redhat, comp.os.linux.setup

    In article <nm3dgq$cla$1@dont-email.me>,
    William Unruh <unruh@invalid.ca> wrote:
    On 2016-07-12, William Pechter <pechter@pechter.net> wrote:
    In article <nlppcf$ehv$1@dont-email.me>,
    William Unruh <unruh@invalid.ca> wrote:
    On 2016-07-09, pechter@t61.(none) (William Pechter) <pechter@t61> wrote: >>>> Has anyone got Winmodem (ConexantHSF) support hacked in to any
    linux kernel newer than 2.6?

    You could probably buy a used USRobotics etc modem for $5 and not use a >>>stupid winmodem.


    I'd like to get Ubuntu supporting it on a Thinkpad T61, but I'd
    consider other LTS versions of linux like Open Suse or Debian (I
    want to retire the ugly old 19200modem I've got in the PCcard slot
    which dates from my IBM days on OS/2).

    I really need to get the modem working as well as dual gigabit
    ethernets which takes up my pccard slot.

    o
    I could go USB but was just wondering?
    Or that.
    At $5/hr coding to get it working, you should be able to buy a new >>>computer, never mind a modem
    Do you really thing Gigabit never mind dual gigabit would work? I am not >>>sure that the bus is fast enough on such an ancient machine.



    Thanks...

    Bill
    pechter-at-gmail.com

    Can I get it into a loaded T61 laptop? I guess USB could be used for the
    modem, but ugh.

    Agreed. But then again, how often do you use the modem? Are there any
    ISPs that will even answer a modem call?


    Hard to get it INSIDE the laptop. PCCard slots are already in use. External >> is possible but not as nice when you're looking for portability.

    Well, in some laptops you can open them up and replace the modem.


    I've got Telebit Trailblazers and 56k externals galore. Not too light and >> small.

    Bill
    --

    The person I'm sending the laptop to is still on dialup.
    Unfortunately, that's not going to change.

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  • From Mike Easter@21:1/5 to William Pechter on Thu Jul 14 19:35:19 2016
    XPost: alt.os.linux.debian, alt.os.linux.ubuntu, alt.os.linux.suse
    XPost: alt.os.linux.redhat, comp.os.linux.setup

    William Pechter wrote:
    The person I'm sending the laptop to is still on dialup.
    Unfortunately, that's not going to change.

    Will you be configuring the LT and its OS to use the dialup before you
    send it, or will the recipient of the LT be doing that for themselves?

    --
    Mike Easter

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  • From Bobbie Sellers@21:1/5 to William Pechter on Thu Jul 14 19:40:50 2016
    XPost: alt.os.linux.debian, alt.os.linux.ubuntu, alt.os.linux.suse
    XPost: alt.os.linux.redhat, comp.os.linux.setup

    On 07/14/2016 06:45 PM, William Pechter wrote:
    In article <nm3dgq$cla$1@dont-email.me>,
    William Unruh <unruh@invalid.ca> wrote:
    On 2016-07-12, William Pechter <pechter@pechter.net> wrote:
    In article <nlppcf$ehv$1@dont-email.me>,
    William Unruh <unruh@invalid.ca> wrote:
    On 2016-07-09, pechter@t61.(none) (William Pechter) <pechter@t61> wrote: >>>>> Has anyone got Winmodem (ConexantHSF) support hacked in to any
    linux kernel newer than 2.6?

    You could probably buy a used USRobotics etc modem for $5 and not use a >>>> stupid winmodem.


    I'd like to get Ubuntu supporting it on a Thinkpad T61, but I'd
    consider other LTS versions of linux like Open Suse or Debian (I
    want to retire the ugly old 19200modem I've got in the PCcard slot
    which dates from my IBM days on OS/2).

    I really need to get the modem working as well as dual gigabit
    ethernets which takes up my pccard slot.

    o
    I could go USB but was just wondering?
    Or that.
    At $5/hr coding to get it working, you should be able to buy a new
    computer, never mind a modem
    Do you really thing Gigabit never mind dual gigabit would work? I am not >>>> sure that the bus is fast enough on such an ancient machine.



    Thanks...

    Bill
    pechter-at-gmail.com

    Can I get it into a loaded T61 laptop? I guess USB could be used for the >>> modem, but ugh.

    Agreed. But then again, how often do you use the modem? Are there any
    ISPs that will even answer a modem call?

    I haven't checked lately but DSLExtreme.com used to have dial-up access. I am sure that others will have similar facilities.



    Hard to get it INSIDE the laptop. PCCard slots are already in use. External
    is possible but not as nice when you're looking for portability.

    Well, in some laptops you can open them up and replace the modem.


    I've got Telebit Trailblazers and 56k externals galore. Not too light and >>> small.

    Bill
    --

    The person I'm sending the laptop to is still on dialup.
    Unfortunately, that's not going to change.

    Yes that makes things harder but I found lots of information
    on my desktop Amiga with dial-up even before I got my 56K modem.

    bliss

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  • From William Pechter@21:1/5 to MikeE@ster.invalid on Fri Jul 15 03:25:20 2016
    XPost: alt.os.linux.debian, alt.os.linux.ubuntu, alt.os.linux.suse
    XPost: alt.os.linux.redhat, comp.os.linux.setup

    In article <dur0f7F2kssU1@mid.individual.net>,
    Mike Easter <MikeE@ster.invalid> wrote:
    William Pechter wrote:
    The person I'm sending the laptop to is still on dialup.
    Unfortunately, that's not going to change.

    Will you be configuring the LT and its OS to use the dialup before you
    send it, or will the recipient of the LT be doing that for themselves?

    --
    Mike Easter

    I'm hoping to do it. I may install CentOS 6.8 since it has the right kernel version for the
    lousy winmodem...

    I've also picked up a pcmcia 28.8... just in case.

    Bill

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  • From Mike Easter@21:1/5 to William Pechter on Fri Jul 15 08:29:08 2016
    XPost: alt.os.linux.debian, alt.os.linux.ubuntu, alt.os.linux.suse
    XPost: alt.os.linux.redhat, comp.os.linux.setup

    William Pechter wrote:
    Mike Easter wrote:
    William Pechter wrote:
    The person I'm sending the laptop to is still on dialup.
    Unfortunately, that's not going to change.

    Will you be configuring the LT and its OS to use the dialup before
    you send it, or will the recipient of the LT be doing that for
    themselves?

    I'm hoping to do it. I may install CentOS 6.8 since it has the right
    kernel version for thelousy winmodem...

    I've also picked up a pcmcia 28.8... just in case.

    What OS is the recipient most familiar? Are you choosing the CentOS
    because of your familiarity or because of the recipient's?

    I'm thinking of 'various' strategies to best match the recipient with
    the dialup capabilities.

    If the recipient isn't already a conventional linux person, a Puppy
    Linux might be an easier match for dialup.


    --
    Mike Easter

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  • From William Unruh@21:1/5 to Bobbie Sellers on Fri Jul 15 19:33:40 2016
    XPost: alt.os.linux.debian, alt.os.linux.ubuntu, alt.os.linux.suse
    XPost: alt.os.linux.redhat, comp.os.linux.setup

    On 2016-07-15, Bobbie Sellers <bliss-sf4ever@dslextreme.com> wrote:
    Agreed. But then again, how often do you use the modem? Are there any
    ISPs that will even answer a modem call?

    I haven't checked lately but DSLExtreme.com used to have dial-up access. I am sure that others will have similar facilities.

    I think his problem is not the dialup access, but the fact that the
    modem is a winmodem and his (any?) distro does not have the driver for
    his particular winmodem (ie, it has to tell the EXTREMEly dumb "modem"
    to send out all of the individual blurts and beeps that are a modem's
    messages to the far side). His laptop has such a modem and he does not
    have the driver, and the only driver version he has found is only good
    for the 2.6.x line of kenrels. And it is "impossible" to replace the
    modem inside the machine (laptops are notoriously difficult to get into
    to change anything).

    One possibility would be a usb modem-- Of course most of what are called
    usb modems these days are things that connect you to a cell network,
    which I assume is not what is wanted. What is wantd is a modem connected
    to a standard wired telephone line.

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  • From Mike Easter@21:1/5 to William Unruh on Fri Jul 15 15:04:44 2016
    XPost: alt.os.linux.debian, alt.os.linux.ubuntu, alt.os.linux.suse
    XPost: alt.os.linux.redhat, comp.os.linux.setup

    William Unruh wrote:
    One possibility would be a usb modem--

    I'm not seeing any USB hardware dialup modems for much less than about
    $50. Lotsa USB winmodems for much less, say $10-15.

    https://www.amazon.com/USRobotics-USR5637-FaxModem-Windows-Linux/dp/B0013FDLM0
    USRobotics USR5637 56K USB FaxModem for Windows, Mac, Linux



    --
    Mike Easter

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  • From Paul@21:1/5 to Mike Easter on Fri Jul 15 20:16:28 2016
    XPost: alt.os.linux.debian, alt.os.linux.ubuntu, alt.os.linux.suse
    XPost: alt.os.linux.redhat, comp.os.linux.setup

    Mike Easter wrote:
    William Unruh wrote:
    One possibility would be a usb modem--

    I'm not seeing any USB hardware dialup modems for much less than about
    $50. Lotsa USB winmodems for much less, say $10-15.

    https://www.amazon.com/USRobotics-USR5637-FaxModem-Windows-Linux/dp/B0013FDLM0
    USRobotics USR5637 56K USB FaxModem for Windows, Mac, Linux

    There's a Startech with datapump for less.

    StarTech.com External V.92 56K USB Fax Modem (USB56KEMH) $29 https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00HNX1MF4?psc=1

    Conserve system resources with hardware-based signal processing

    One review here.

    http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16825189005

    Startech is one of the companies that does "disclosure"
    on the chip used. You might expect more than one chip inside,
    if the unit has a silicon DAA. Or a bulky regular DAA.

    https://www.startech.com/Networking-IO/Bluetooth-Telecom/USB-56k-Modem~USB56KEMH

    Conexant - CX93010

    http://www.conexant.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/pb_CX9ZNR0226.pdf

    You shouldn't need a DSP driver for that. It should appear
    as a USB serial port or something, supporting the Hayes
    AT command set.

    HTH,
    Paul

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  • From William Pechter@21:1/5 to MikeE@ster.invalid on Sat Jul 16 05:29:34 2016
    XPost: alt.os.linux.debian, alt.os.linux.ubuntu, alt.os.linux.suse
    XPost: alt.os.linux.redhat, comp.os.linux.setup

    In article <dusdq5Fd50cU1@mid.individual.net>,
    Mike Easter <MikeE@ster.invalid> wrote:
    William Pechter wrote:
    Mike Easter wrote:
    William Pechter wrote:
    The person I'm sending the laptop to is still on dialup.
    Unfortunately, that's not going to change.

    Will you be configuring the LT and its OS to use the dialup before
    you send it, or will the recipient of the LT be doing that for
    themselves?

    I'm hoping to do it. I may install CentOS 6.8 since it has the right
    kernel version for thelousy winmodem...

    I've also picked up a pcmcia 28.8... just in case.

    What OS is the recipient most familiar? Are you choosing the CentOS
    because of your familiarity or because of the recipient's?

    Nope... I'm thinking of what linux has a 2.6 kernel and reasonably current patches
    so I can patch the winmodem into the kernel -- rhel/centos is a better shot than
    Ubuntu11 oe 12.

    RHEL 6.8 came out last month or maybe in May...

    I've used RHEL, CentOS, Suse, Debian, Slackware, Mandrake, Mandriva, back to SLS103 and kernel
    0.99... I've been doing Unix stuff since '87 or so.

    I just want to send out something pretty solid and secure that will just keep running a couple of
    years.

    I've got the AOL and Windows stuff on the box but I wanted to see if the PengAOL dialer would work
    to get her to her account and that would let her dump her old Mac.

    The real fun is finding out if this AOL dialer for Linux will still interoperate.
    The one thing about the dual boot is she can download software and install it from the Windows
    partition.


    I'm thinking of 'various' strategies to best match the recipient with
    the dialup capabilities.

    If the recipient isn't already a conventional linux person, a Puppy
    Linux might be an easier match for dialup.


    --
    Mike Easter

    Bill

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  • From Theo Markettos@21:1/5 to none on Tue Jul 26 23:33:57 2016
    XPost: alt.os.linux.debian, alt.os.linux.ubuntu, alt.os.linux.suse
    XPost: alt.os.linux.redhat, comp.os.linux.setup

    In alt.os.linux.debian William Pechter <pechter@t61.(none)> wrote:
    Has anyone got Winmodem (ConexantHSF) support hacked in to any
    linux kernel newer than 2.6?

    I had a look a few years ago. My interest was playing around with Winmodems
    as a phone-to-DAC interface for playing audio, rather than as a modem. That seemed to be feasible, but I didn't actually own any hardware so didn't try
    for real. I was looking at HSF drivers but for USB devices.

    My vague recollection is that the audio side was do-able, but the side that actually converted serial data into audio tones was troublesome. I think it wasn't open source and supplied as binary blob. That makes it a problem to port to a new kernel ABI.

    Theo

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  • From William Pechter@21:1/5 to klammerj@NOSPAM.a1.net on Tue Jul 12 18:17:33 2016
    XPost: alt.os.linux.debian

    In article <nlraeb$1crr$2@gioia.aioe.org>,
    Johann Klammer <klammerj@NOSPAM.a1.net> wrote:
    On 07/09/2016 04:43 AM, none William Pechter wrote:
    Has anyone got Winmodem (ConexantHSF) support hacked in to any
    linux kernel newer than 2.6?

    I'd like to get Ubuntu supporting it on a Thinkpad T61, but I'd
    consider other LTS versions of linux like Open Suse or Debian (I
    want to retire the ugly old 19200modem I've got in the PCcard slot
    which dates from my IBM days on OS/2).

    I really need to get the modem working as well as dual gigabit
    ethernets which takes up my pccard slot.

    I could go USB but was just wondering?

    Thanks...

    Bill
    pechter-at-gmail.com

    I think there were 3rd party kernel modules for those around,
    but they were speed limited....

    <http://www.thinkwiki.org/wiki/Conexant_HSF_modem_drivers>

    tried any of those?



    Got the sources... The stuff all stopped working about Kernel 2.6.x.

    Bill
    --
    --
    Digital had it then. Don't you wish you could buy it now!
    pechter-at-gmail.com http://xkcd.com/705/

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  • From William Unruh@21:1/5 to William Pechter on Tue Jul 12 18:39:22 2016
    XPost: alt.os.linux.debian, alt.os.linux.ubuntu, alt.os.linux.suse
    XPost: alt.os.linux.redhat, comp.os.linux.setup

    On 2016-07-12, William Pechter <pechter@pechter.net> wrote:
    In article <nlppcf$ehv$1@dont-email.me>,
    William Unruh <unruh@invalid.ca> wrote:
    On 2016-07-09, pechter@t61.(none) (William Pechter) <pechter@t61> wrote:
    Has anyone got Winmodem (ConexantHSF) support hacked in to any
    linux kernel newer than 2.6?

    You could probably buy a used USRobotics etc modem for $5 and not use a >>stupid winmodem.


    I'd like to get Ubuntu supporting it on a Thinkpad T61, but I'd
    consider other LTS versions of linux like Open Suse or Debian (I
    want to retire the ugly old 19200modem I've got in the PCcard slot
    which dates from my IBM days on OS/2).

    I really need to get the modem working as well as dual gigabit
    ethernets which takes up my pccard slot.

    o
    I could go USB but was just wondering?
    Or that.
    At $5/hr coding to get it working, you should be able to buy a new >>computer, never mind a modem
    Do you really thing Gigabit never mind dual gigabit would work? I am not >>sure that the bus is fast enough on such an ancient machine.



    Thanks...

    Bill
    pechter-at-gmail.com

    Can I get it into a loaded T61 laptop? I guess USB could be used for the modem, but ugh.

    Agreed. But then again, how often do you use the modem? Are there any
    ISPs that will even answer a modem call?


    Hard to get it INSIDE the laptop. PCCard slots are already in use. External is possible but not as nice when you're looking for portability.

    Well, in some laptops you can open them up and replace the modem.


    I've got Telebit Trailblazers and 56k externals galore. Not too light and small.

    Bill
    --

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