On Sat, 25 Nov 2000 02:13:57 -0500 (EST), Thomas Mueller wrote:

> How old is LSPPP.EXE?  It must be very antiquated if it doesn't allow a
> baud rate > 19600.  I remember Ashton-Tate Framework III 1.1 allowed a
> baud rate up to 19200 (or was it 38400?), and ports could be COM1, COM2 or
> COM3, but not COM4, but that software dates to 1989.  I think there still is
> a Framework with a Web site http://www.framework.com
> no longer associated with Ashton-Tate or Borland.
> 2400 bps was a normal modem speed in 1990, and they were going up to 9600.
> 14.4 K modems were still a few years away.

DIRECTORY           11-23-00   1:01p  c:\!\lsppp
--a---       9,969  11-23-00   1:00p  c:\!\lsppp.zip
DIRECTORY           11-23-00   1:01p  c:\!\lsppp\.
DIRECTORY           11-23-00   1:01p  c:\!\lsppp\..
--a---       2,834  11-23-00   6:13p  c:\!\lsppp\lsppp.doc
--a---      27,312  11-23-00   5:11p  c:\!\lsppp\lsppp.exe

 Yes, it is so new that the clock in my computer had not yet "caught-up"
to the clock in the computer used by the programer.

-- 
 Glenn
(your friendly neighborhood compu-nerd)
 http://www.delorie.com/listserv/mime/
  http://freedos-32.sourceforge.net/

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