Read on full site | Join TechSpot! (it's free) | Bookmark / Share this



56K Robotics External Modem Driver

Mamut0o1
01-17-2008, 08:37 AM
Hello, I removed XP from my PC and decided to Install Ubuntu and everything works good exept that I'm stuck with my external modem. This is a robotics model 5686 and Ubuntu for some reason is not seeing my device. When I do wvdialconf...I get no modems installed. Can anyone help me out and tell me if there is a driver or what I'm missing...I've been trying to resolve this issue for 4 days now; im sinkin here

chen

kimsland
01-17-2008, 12:00 PM
56K modems are cheap and nearly obsolete (except for paper faxing)

Ask at the Ubuntu forum for a Linux capable 56K modem
And remove yours from your system

4days does not equal ~ $15

Ad
01-17-2008, 12:00 PM
  

Mamut0o1
01-17-2008, 12:55 PM
I was hoping to get it to work but I guess your correct, I'm speding way too much time on this. The only reason I need a modem is to fax.

Thanks

Nodsu
01-17-2008, 03:12 PM
Bollocks. Serial modems are the most standard piece of equipment on the planet and they work with everything made from sth like 1970s. It's the internal "winmodems" that never work properly.

Your assumption that every device needs to be "detected" is wrong. Just set up dial-up networking/faxing and give it the serial port device your modem is connected to (/dev/ttyS0 or /dev/ttyS1 most likely)

Mamut0o1
01-17-2008, 07:57 PM
Nodsu thanks for your help, I already tried to setup a dialup configuration using Admin>network then setting up a "number" using /dev/ttyS0 and I also tried /dev/ttyS1 and it didn't dial at all. is there a file I can vi and get this done...it's the first time I install an external modem and I'm a little bit lost.

chen

Nodsu
01-18-2008, 06:06 AM
Obvious things first.. Does the modem even work? Did it work in Windows and is it connected exactly the same way as before? Is it turned on? :p

Then you could check if your serial port is detected at all by Ubuntu and what device node it gets. See the output of the dmesg command. It should say something about /dev/ttySX where X is a number. Might detect it as a /dev/modem device too.

Install a program called minicom. This will let you talk directly to the modem and see if it responds at all.

caravel
01-18-2008, 12:51 PM
Nodsu is 100% correct. You don't need a driver for a serial modem, as effectively Linux deals only with the COM port and sends standard commands to the modem through that. It's ages since I've used a 56K modem of any kind but I remember buying my Hayes 56K specifically for Linux at the time, because the rubbishy winmodems wouldn't work. I think I just used ppp or a gui front end for it (kppp?) and simply set up my connection and used /dev/ttyS0.

Mamut0o1
01-22-2008, 11:01 AM
Nosdsu thanks for the advise; I plug in the modem into a windows machine and it didn't detech it eather so I returned the Modem and got another one so I did wvconfig and it came up as ttyS0 right away no drivers needed as you mentioned before. I was able to send a fax =) .
thank you all.

Post a reply, see related topics & more

Tip: Download Advanced SystemCare 3 Free - Clean, Repair, Protect & Optimize your PC.



 Top Technology News

TechSpot Blog: Disable Windows automatic check for solutions after a program crashes

Weekend Open Forum: Google Chrome OS and the future of cloud computing

Tech Tip of the Week: Unearth Region-Specific Windows 7 Themes

Sony: PlayStation 3 to be 3D-capable via firmware update

iSuppli: DDR3 to account for over half of DRAM shipments by Q2 2010

Facebook named third most popular video website behind YouTube and Hulu

Patriot introduces new PS-100 SSD series

Sony working on digital store for music, movies, books

More Tech News

  
 Software Downloads

Norton Virus Definitions 2003-07 November 20, 2009

AVG Anti-Virus Updates November 20, 2009

Norton Virus Definitions 2008-09 November 20, 2009

avast! Virus Definitions November 20, 2009

McAfee SuperDAT Update 5808

Kaspersky Anti-Virus Update November 20, 2009

Google SketchUp 7.1.6087

More Downloads



Copyright © 1998-2009 TechSpot.com. TechSpot is a registered trademark. All Rights Reserved.