As a matter of fact it "might" work, but the only apps that would be
able to make use of that connection would be the ones being run "inside"
the guest OS and none residing on the host OS. And the performance is
already bad enough to make using even VMware something that you soon
come to the point of using only when it's absolutely a necessity.

It's still far cheaper and easier to purchase a new modem.

[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> 
> My guess would be no.  Wine is used to emulate an environment for
> an application, not create a complete Windows environment.  A winmodem
> needs driver support that a simple emulator can't deliver.  On the other
> hand, if you use a package like VMware, now that should likely work.
> 
> ---------------------------------
> Glen Adams
> Network Specialist
> I2 Technologies
> 
> 
>                     Stefan Srdic
>                     <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>         To:     
>[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>                     Sent by:                          cc:
>                     [EMAIL PROTECTED]        Subject:     [expert] A very 
>good WINE questions
>                     kesoft.com
> 
> 
>                     09/11/00 12:07 AM
>                     Please respond to expert
> 
> 
> 
> I read that WINE is Windows compatibility layer for Linux. I have a
> question,
> since WinModems are unusable under Linux would it be possible to run the
> Windows WinModem driver under WINE to use the modem in Linux?
> 
> Keep in touch with http://mandrakeforum.com:
> Subscribe the "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" mailing list.
> 
>   ------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Keep in touch with http://mandrakeforum.com:
> Subscribe the "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" mailing list.

Keep in touch with http://mandrakeforum.com: 
Subscribe the "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" mailing list.

Reply via email to