I believe that external zoom modens are still for sale and support
the old AT commands

cheers
DS

.

On Fri, 13 Apr 2018 13:36:36 -0400 dmccunney <dennis.mccun...@gmail.com>
writes:
> On Fri, Apr 13, 2018 at 7:02 AM, David McMackins 
> <cont...@mcmackins.org> wrote:
> > My laptop has a hardware modem, internal. It's a Pentium III 
> machine, so
> > I'm not sure what risks that may imply about it being a Winmodem 
> I've
> > heard such nasty things about.
> 
> Winmodems were simplified devices which got the nod for systems
> because they were cheaper, and PC vendors all looking to shave 
> pennies
> on what it cost to make a system.  They were called Winmodems 
> because
> the stuff left out of the modem in hardware was supplied in software
> by Windows.  If you weren't *running* Windows, you had problems.
> 
> Does your laptop have a serial port?  If the internal modem is a
> Winmodem, you might be able to score a Hayes or USR external modem
> from eBay or the like, connect it to the serial port, and not use 
> the
> internal modem for this.
> 
> > I will look into Net-Tamer and Procom. Telix was the software I 
> had
> > found the defunct website for. I'm not sure if I want to trust a 
> mirror.
> 
> What I used to use was Telix.  It should be possible for find a
> working copy. Essentially, DOS comm packages needed to communicate
> with a modem that supported the Hayes AT command set.  When you
> selected something to call from the comm program's list, the program
> would open the port the modem was connected to and send something
> alike "ATDT<phone number>" to it.  AT woke up the modem, and DT told
> it to dial <phone number>, and a connection would be established.
> 
> > As far as which BBSes are still alive, there exist directories for
> > finding them, and they are apparently popular among people who are
> > interested in vintage tech. A colleague of mine knows more.
> 
> There aren't very many.  There is a Yahoo group called 80sBBS
> populated by old time BBS folks you might want to look at.  A 
> current
> poster has been talking about getting his old Commodore 64 BBS back 
> on
> line.  (And one of his challenges was client the user could use that
> would reproduce the C64 experience.  It turns out there's an
> applicable open source offering.)
> 
> The problem that such efforts encounter is that very few folks who
> might call BBSes still *have* modems to do dial up access.  Most of
> the BBSes on line now I'm aware of offer telnet access instead.
> 
> I still have a US Robotics 56K modem in a parts drawer, but I no
> longer have a landline to hook it up to.  My phone service is VOIP.
> It might be possible to get the USR to place calls over VOIP, but I
> have nothing to call using it, and it's not worth the effort to
> experiment.
> 
> > David E. McMackins II
> ______
> Dennis
> 
>
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******************************************************>>>>
>From Dale Sterner - MS organic chemistry
http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/jo00975a052
*******************************************************>>>>

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