Linux-Networking Digest #759, Volume #10          Mon, 5 Apr 99 22:13:40 EDT

Contents:
  Re: Help! Connecting linux > WinNT printer? (L J Bayuk)
  Re: What's a twisted pair? ("ACE Alex")
  Re: how to know PC's IP once connected to ISP? (Rod Roark)
  ipfwadm 'deny' and 'reject' difference? (Tim Wood)
  Re: Problems with my PPP connection ("Ben Goble, Lakewood Colorado")
  Re: What's a twisted pair? ("Walter L. Preuninger II")
  Clarification re: remote printing and maquerading (Darren Enns)
  home network using Linux (E R S)
  screwy minicom connection (Qozmoe)
  Re: firewall problem (Ron Watkins)
  slow 3c905b (andrzej sydorko)
  VMWARE, Samba and atrributes (Morten Poulsen)
  Re: Why Windows requires special netmask?? (Ron Watkins)
  Re: Firewalls and proxy servers? ("John Hardin")
  Re: screwy minicom connection (Suresh)
  Re: Home networking survey (Clay Calvert)
  Deny telnet but allow mail? ("Mark")
  Program kick-off after mail arrival ("Mark L. Smith")
  Re: pppd probs (Jon-o Addleman)
  Re: Damn W98 and Samba! (John McKee)
  Re: Fujitsu LB2 56k Modem (Jim Richardson)

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (L J Bayuk)
Subject: Re: Help! Connecting linux > WinNT printer?
Date: 6 Apr 1999 00:24:53 GMT

[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>Hi,
>
>I was wondering if anyone could advise me on connecting my Linux box to
>a WinNT box so as to be able to print from Linux on that printer.  ANY
>guidelines for such a setup would be MOST appreciated as I am still
>quite a novice in the Linux network field.
>
>Linux Box
>
>-PPro 200
>-Slackware Linux v4.0.0
>-Kernel v2.2.4
>-Samba v2.0.3
>-Other packages shipped with the distrib.
>
>WinNT Box
>
>-WinNT Workstation v4.00, sp4
>-TCP/IP network already fully installed/operational

Two possible ways:

(1) Share the printer from NT, use SAMBA on the Linux system to connect
to the shared printer.

(2) Load NT TCP/IP Printing Services which comes with NT WS and start
the service (lpdsvc or something like that), don't put spaces
in the printer name. Set up Linux with /etc/printcap pointing
to the NT system as a remote printer (rm=NT_hostname:rp=NT_printername).

------------------------------

From: "ACE Alex" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: What's a twisted pair?
Date: Mon, 5 Apr 1999 23:48:51 +0200

Thats a tp cable all right!

Today there are basicly two types of cables. coax (2 cables, used for tv
anten cables) and tp ( 8 cabels in one big one, they are/where twisted in
the begining). So you got the twisted.

Adrian May wrote in message <7ebaae$lp6$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>...
>I ask because I just bought what doesn't seem to be one.  I'd like to know
>how it should be wired so that I can find out whether he messed it up and
>how I can put it right.  What he's given me doesnt look the least bit
>twisted.  If I hold the wire and point the plug upwards and look at the
side
>where the contacts are, then from left to right it goes:
>
>white
>blue
>white
>purple
>white
>green
>white
>orange
>
>and exactly the same at the other end of the cable.  Needless to say my
>network doesn't do a damn thing.  Did he mess it up, and if so how do I fix
>it? (I dont want to wait for him.)
>
>Thanks for any help!
>Adrian.
>
>
>



------------------------------

From: Rod Roark <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: how to know PC's IP once connected to ISP?
Date: 5 Apr 1999 21:58:44 GMT

Arcady Genkin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Martin Cooper) writes:

>> Try typing ifconfig....
>You can only type it as root. Is there a way a regular user can know
>his IP?

That's a bit harder.  Type /sbin/ifconfig.    :-)

-- Rod
======================================================================
Sunset Systems                           Preconfigured Linux Computers
http://www.sunsetsystems.com/                      and Custom Software
======================================================================

------------------------------

From: Tim Wood <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: ipfwadm 'deny' and 'reject' difference?
Date: Mon, 05 Apr 1999 14:54:06 -0700

I've read the man page and Firewall and NET-3 howtos and none of them
explains the difference between these commands.  Can anyone explain? 
Where is it documented?
Thanks,
-TW

------------------------------

From: "Ben Goble, Lakewood Colorado" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Problems with my PPP connection
Date: Mon, 05 Apr 1999 15:30:34 -0600

Suggest you try     http://www.serv.net/~cameron/ezppp/
It worked for me.




Suresh wrote:

> Hi,
> I am trying to connect to my ISP (for Internet access ofcourse). I am
> using "minicom" . My modem (US Roboctic PCI 56K  ) is connected to
> device /dev/ttyS1 (com2).
> My /etc/resolve.conf is as follows
>
> nameserver 199.182.120.203
> nameserver 199.182.120.202
>
> They are the IP addresses of my DNS of the ISP.   Its a PPP connection.
> When i try to connect it kicks me out after 5 seconds and i get NO
> CARRIER message. If i try to use the internet within those 5 seconds i
> get " DNS entry not found" error in my netscape. I am  using Redhat 5.2
> and its really annonying as i have been trying this for couple of weeks
> now and i have no idea whats going on. I would really appreciate if some
> one could help me out of this.
> -Suresh

--
Ben Goble  Lakewood,  Colorado  USA
bgoble at uswest dot net   bgoble at nyx dot net   bgoble at chisp dot net
A Stranger and a Pilgrim on the Earth

------------------------------

From: "Walter L. Preuninger II" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: What's a twisted pair?
Date: Mon, 5 Apr 1999 17:41:56 -0500

Sounds like silver satin cable to me... great for rs232, but...

Luca Filipozzi wrote in message ...
>In article <7ebaae$lp6$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>says...
>> I ask because I just bought what doesn't seem to be one.  I'd like to
know
>> how it should be wired so that I can find out whether he messed it up and
>> how I can put it right.  What he's given me doesnt look the least bit
>> twisted.  If I hold the wire and point the plug upwards and look at the
side
>> where the contacts are, then from left to right it goes:
>>
>> white
>> blue
>> white
>> purple
>> white
>> green
>> white
>> orange
>>
>> and exactly the same at the other end of the cable.  Needless to say my
>> network doesn't do a damn thing.  Did he mess it up, and if so how do I
fix
>> it? (I dont want to wait for him.)
>>
>> Thanks for any help!
>> Adrian.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>Usual colors:
>
>pin 1: orange/white
>pin 2: orange/solid
>pin 3: green/white
>pin 4: blue/solid
>pin 5: blue/white
>pin 6: green/solid
>pin 7: brown/white
>pin 8: brown
>
>Both ends should be the same for a straight-through cable. The "twist"
>applies to each color: color/white is twisted with color/solid.
>
>A cross-over cable has pin 1 crossed with pin 3 and pin 2 crossed with
>pin 6.
>
>Only the orange and green pairs are needed for 10Base-T or 100Base-T. All
>four pairs are need for 100Base-TX (not commonly used).
>--
>Luca Filipozzi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>



------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Darren Enns)
Subject: Clarification re: remote printing and maquerading
Date: 5 Apr 1999 17:38:02 -0500

Finally, over the last few days, I have solved some
nagging problems with my networked Linux setup -- but
it would be great if someone could make a few comments
(good or bad) about what I did to get things working:

1) In order to get masquerading working from Linux to Linux,
one helpful person suggested that I had to insure that the client
had a 'route' to the host with the modem connection.  Sure enough,
if I run the following command my Linux-to-Linux masquerade 
finally works (W98 to Linux worked fine right off the bat!):

route add default gw myhostpcwiththemodem

However, it seems like a side-effect of this is that when I
want to use a *local* modem on the client, my internet
stuff doesn't work anymore!  Is there a variation of the
route command that would look for the internet in *both* places?

2) In order to get my SMB remote printing working between Linux
and Linux (again, Linux to W98 worked fine!), I had to do two
things to my Redhat files:

- change the 'af' line in my client's /etc/printcap file to say:

:af=/var/spool/lpd/lp/.config:\

instead of what it said originally:

:af=/var/spool/lpd/lp/acct:\

- add an entry to my host's '/etc/smb.conf' file for the
printer that I mentioned back on the client, and insure
that the spool gave full access to the userid I used to
remotely connect on the client:

path = /home/remoteusername/spool

This makes me wonder why the original entry does not work, since it said:

; NOTE: There is NO need to specifically define each individual printer
[printers]
   comment = All Printers
...

Any comments about this stuff?

Dare
-- 
Darren Enns
EMAIL: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
HTTP:  www.pangea.ca/~dmenns


------------------------------

From: E R S <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.setup
Subject: home network using Linux
Date: Mon, 05 Apr 1999 22:39:28 GMT

Hi,

I have three computers at home.  They are all connected to
each other (10baseT LAN) via a hub and the hub is connected
to a cable modem (each computer has seperate account/ip
address -assigned by isp).

**Problem:

When sharing files over the LAN (i.e. sending files from
computer A to computer B -within my home), the files end up
going over the larger LAN (Road Runner-Albany) before going
to the destination computer -just 2 feet away! This makes
for slower file transfers and network printing than if all
those electrons stayed within my room.   :)

**Proposed Fix:

I would like to setup a LAN within a LAN -if you will.
Here's what I would like to do: 1) connect my two main
computers to a hub, 2) connect that hub to a third (LINUX)
computer, 3)connect the LINUX box to a printer and, using a
second NIC, to the cable modem .  This arrangement should
ensure that file transfers/print jobs between my two main
computers will stay within the house - not be sent over the
Road Runner LAN.  ***NOTE: I realize that this could be done
*without* using Linux, but I want to learn and use programs
that run on Linux --I'm sure you guys can appreciate that.
;)

**Questions:

How hard will this be to do?  (I've played around with linux
before -I'm not afraid)
What sites can you direct me to for
    -file sharing between win98 and linux?
    -sharing a printer between win98 and linux?


Your help is greatly appreciated.  :)

Take care,

E R S






------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Qozmoe)
Subject: screwy minicom connection
Date: 5 Apr 1999 22:44:08 GMT

i'm trying to make a terminal connection to my school's VMS computer using
minicom.  i dial up the number, hear the connection being made, and minicom
begins to display some characters from the school.  it occasionally gets to the
login prompt, but it always always hangs up after about a minute or less.  i've
tried this same connection using hyperterm in win95 and it connects fine nearly
every time.  can anyone think of any reason why this is happening??
qozmo

------------------------------

From: Ron Watkins <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: firewall problem
Date: Mon, 05 Apr 1999 14:50:26 -0700

Did you configure all the computers on both networks to use the same WINS
server?

<<RON>>

[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> 
> Hi there,
> 
> I have two networks connected with linux firewall. Users from first network
> can validate on NT PDC which is on second network. Problem is that I users
> from first network are unable to see computers in their "Network
> Neighborhood". Wins server is also on second network.
> 
> Any ideas?
> 
> Thanks
> 
> -----------== Posted via Deja News, The Discussion Network ==----------
> http://www.dejanews.com/       Search, Read, Discuss, or Start Your Own

------------------------------

From: andrzej sydorko <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: slow 3c905b
Date: Mon, 05 Apr 1999 15:41:30 +0200

I have a frustrating problem with my 905b NIC's.

First some info:
I have disabled PNP in the BIOS
I have disabled auto-negotiation with 3c90xcfg.exe in DOS
The driver is loaded as module 3c59x 0.99H-WOL

The kernel is 2.0.36
The dist. is RedHat 5.2
My network is 1 RedHat-box and 1 Win98 box (for simplicity).
All NIC's are 3c905b


The problem:

It's the troughput. When transferring files from Linux to Windows (ftp,
smb..whatever) performance is good., about 6mb/s
But when transferring files from Windows to Linux, performance is poor,
about 1-1.2mb/s


At first I thought this was because maybee Linux has poor support for
IDE-drives, (maybee it's fast only one way) so I got a couple of U2W
disks. Imagine my surprise when this didn't help?
I have been searching the newsgroups for cases similar to mine, but has
struck no luck.
Anybody fammiliar with this problem?



------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Morten Poulsen)
Subject: VMWARE, Samba and atrributes
Date: Mon, 05 Apr 1999 13:36:11 GMT

Hello All

I hope sombody can help me with this problem

I have, on my Linux-box, my Dos/win98 partition mounted as '/dosc',
this dir is share with Samba with full read-write permissions. I then
install Win98 in a VMWARE virtual machine and want to mount the dir
'/dosc' as drive D. All this goes well, but I cannot change attributes
on files on my drive D!! 
Is the problem in my Samba-configuration or in VMWARE?

Any help is very welcome!

Regards
Morten Poulsen
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Morten Poulsen
Author of 
  FileManager PRO and 
  Programmer's Site Updater
http://www.poulsen.org
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

------------------------------

From: Ron Watkins <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Why Windows requires special netmask??
Date: Mon, 05 Apr 1999 14:25:07 -0700

"IP destination address" -- this is different from a netmask.  The destination
address 255.255.255.255 is (in theory) an internet-wide broadcast.  In
practice it's a broadcast that will stop at border routers but may or may not
be routed to the internal network.  Usually this kind of broadcast is not
routed at all. 

What they're telling you here is that the Win95 client broadcasts its DHCP
request to 255.255.255.255; make sure your routers are configured so that your
DHCP server will get the request (bad solution), or put either a DHCP server
or forwarder on the same subnet (good solution). 

<<RON>>

Vincent wrote:
> 
> Reading the dhcpd manual, it states "some DHCP clients (e.g. Windows 95)
> must be able to send packets with an IP destination address of
> 255.255.255.255".  Correct me if I'm wrong, but if there is 3 different
> classes of networks which has its own netmask:
> 
> CLASS A - 255.0.0.0
> CLASS B - 255.255.0.0
> CLASS C - 255.255.255.0
> 
> Where does the require 255.255.255.255 come from.  Is this some sort of
> Microsoft thing or what.  Any ideas??
> 
> Vincent

------------------------------

From: "John Hardin" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.setup
Subject: Re: Firewalls and proxy servers?
Date: Mon, 5 Apr 1999 14:35:50 -0700


Eric wrote in message <1z7O2.1368$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>...
>Although ip masquerading should allow me to accomplish this easily, i
don't
>see it giving my network any protection from the exterior.  Ideally, I
would
>like to control the incoming data, to try to cut out any malicious
attacks.
>Currently, being logged on once in a while over a modem cuts out my
chances
>of attacks due to the amount of time I am online.  I am afriad, however,
of
>having my system online 24hrs/day and not having protection for my LAN.
>
>In the ideal world, I'd like to be able to restrict incoming data streams
>(from the Internet), and unrestrict all outgoing data (from the local
LAN).
>I do need, however (at the very least) incoming telnet & ftp access.
>Eventually, would also like to set up a web/mail server (but that is
further
>on down the road).
>
>What is the best way for me to accomplish this task?  Where can I get more
>info, apart from the Firewall HOWTO?  It seems to be written for RedHat
3.x,
>and I'm not sure what has changed since...  furthermore, it doesn't
discuss
>any of the ftp/telnet/web/mail server needs...


Take a look at http://www.wolfenet.com/~jhardin/ipfwadm.html

It's a GUI around the Linux masq and firewall and should help you get your
security configured the way you want it.

--
 John Hardin KA7OHZ                               [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 pgpk -a finger://gonzo.wolfenet.com/jhardin    PGP key ID: 0x41EA94F5
 PGP key fingerprint: A3 0C 5B C2 EF 0D 2C E5  E9 BF C8 33 A7 A9 CE 76
=======================================================================
  In the Lion
  the Mighty Lion
  the Zebra sleeps tonight...
  Dee de-ee-ee-ee-ee de de de we um umma way!




------------------------------

From: Suresh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: screwy minicom connection
Date: Mon, 05 Apr 1999 15:50:47 -0700

I am having the same problem connecting to my ISP. If you can fix it, please let me
know as its driving me crazy for past couple of days.
-Suresh

Qozmoe wrote:

> i'm trying to make a terminal connection to my school's VMS computer using
> minicom.  i dial up the number, hear the connection being made, and minicom
> begins to display some characters from the school.  it occasionally gets to the
> login prompt, but it always always hangs up after about a minute or less.  i've
> tried this same connection using hyperterm in win95 and it connects fine nearly
> every time.  can anyone think of any reason why this is happening??
> qozmo




------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Clay Calvert)
Crossposted-To: comp.os.ms-windows.networking.misc
Subject: Re: Home networking survey
Date: Tue, 06 Apr 1999 01:49:42 GMT
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

On Mon, 05 Apr 1999 19:57:46 -0400, Nicholas Guarracino
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

>Hi,
>I am writing a report on home networking.  As part of the report, I'd
>like to
>get some feedback from those who've had experience networking their
>homes.  If
>your home is, or at some time was, networked, I'd be very grateful if
>you could
>take a look at the following questions.  Please reply by email to
>[EMAIL PROTECTED] within a week or so.
>
>My report will be posted on my web page at
>http://www.cse.psu.edu/~guarraci if
>you would like to see the results.  Thanks a lot!
>Nick Guarracino
>[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>----------------------------------------------------
>
>1.  Why did you choose to network your home?
I do it for a living, and this is one of the main ways that I learn.
>
>2.  How many years experience do you have with computer networking?
> a.  < 1
> b.  1-2
*c.  3-5
> d.  > 5
>
>3.  How many clients were networked in your home?
3
>
>4.  What were the physical specifications of your server?
> a.  Processor(s):  PII 350
> b.  RAM:  128MB
> c.  Hard Drive(s):  13GB
>
>5. What operating system(s) did you use for the server?  What was your
>motivation for using this OS?
NT4, NT5, Linux - They are the major players
>6.  What operating system(s) did you use for the clients?  What was your
Win98, Win95, NT4, DOS
>motivation for using this OS?
>
>7.  What networking hardware did you use?  (ie, minihubs, routers, etc)
Hub
>8.  Was cost a major concern for you?  What choices did you make to keep
>the
>cost down?
Not a major factor.  I have kept to a 10Mb hub, but I have two of my
hottest PCs linked with a crossover cable at 100Mb full duplex.  One
of these, my server, also has a 10Mb nic that is attached to the hub.
I then route between the two networks.  
>9.  Did you experience any significant problems while networking your
>home?
Not significant
>Feel free to add any comments:

All of my machines can dual/multi boot.  So.. one day PCa will be a
Linux server and the next day it will be a Win98 client.  Another will
be NT5 Server, and then NT4 client.
>
>Thanks again!
>

Clay Calvert, MCSE
www.languru.com/multimon.htm
Remove the "x" in my e-mail address to reply.

------------------------------

From: "Mark" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Deny telnet but allow mail?
Date: Mon, 5 Apr 1999 14:48:07 -0700

Hello,

I'm setting up a Linux box as a mail server.  I want to allow users to
connect to the server to download their mail but I don't want them to have
telnet access.  I don't want to remove telnet completely; there are some
accounts I want to have that access.  I just want to remove telnet access
from the general user.  What's a good way to go about this?

Thanks,

Mark



------------------------------

From: "Mark L. Smith" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Program kick-off after mail arrival
Date: Mon, 05 Apr 1999 18:54:06 -0400

Hello,

I have a catch-all domain account that I'd like to use fetchmail (or
something similar) to pull messages down into separate user accounts'
mail boxes. For instance, sending mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED],
[EMAIL PROTECTED], and [EMAIL PROTECTED] end up in the standard UNIX
mail databases of jdoe, msmith, and pager, respectively. I've perused
the fetchmail docs and I don't think that this will be a big deal.

What I don't know how to do is have a program kick-off when mail arrives
for a certain user. For instance, I'd like a script to kick-off when
mail shows up for the user pager that sends me an alpha-numeric page. I
know that I could tie this on to the end of my fetchmail run (create a
script that runs fetchmail and then runs a program to check to see if a
paticular user has mail and then run a program), but I plan on having
lots of little automated processes tied to various mail accounts and
would like to have the delivery of mail kick-off the process (espcially
since I might have a process that delivers mail locally to kick-off some
processes).

How do I do this? Is there something else better to implment instead?

Thanks!

-Mark


------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Jon-o Addleman)
Subject: Re: pppd probs
Date: Mon, 05 Apr 1999 22:59:58 GMT

Once upon a  4 Apr 1999 19:15:12 GMT, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Qozmoe)
wrote:

>>The PPP-HOWTO explains this quite well... but so sum up, dial in with
>>minicom, and log in. Once the ppp garbage starts coming (lots fo
>>random characters) exit without resetting the modem (ctrl-a x) and
>>type something like this:
>>
>>pppd /dev/ttyS2 115200 -debug
>>
>
>actually the command the HOWTO suggests is 'pppd -d -detach /dev/ttyS2 38400 &'
>which i've tried numerous times and the modem always hangs up after a few
>seconds.

That's basically the same thing: the -d is just the shortened form of
the debug switch. -detach keeps the program from running in the
background, I believe (kind of silly, when you put in the background
explicitly with the & at the end...). The 38400 or 115200 is the port
speed. Unless you have a pretty slow modem, it really doesn't matter,
I don't think, as long as it's not too slow. I know I had to set it at
2400 exactly for my 2400 bps modem to work, but with the 28.8 I'm
using now, it works fine with 115200.

>i tried to check the /var/log/ppp.log file that you mentioned, but it doesn't
>exist on my system.  is there anywhere else the file could be located?  if not,
>does the nonexistence of the file indicate anything?
>thanx,
>qozmo

I'm not entirely sure how the logging works, though I believe there's
a syslogd howto somewhere.

Basically, what I believe happens is that any messages get sent to the
system log, and if you have syslogd running (most systems do) it gets
sorted into separate files, like ppp.log, in this case. The config
file is /etc/syslogd.conf, I think. I've never actually edited this
though, since it worked fine to begin with.

When the messages aren't sorted, I think they end up in either
/var/log/messages or /log/kernel.log.. check the other files in that
directory, in any case.
-- 

Jon-o Addleman

------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (John McKee)
Subject: Re: Damn W98 and Samba!
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Tue, 06 Apr 1999 02:05:01 GMT

I thought you Aussies had to turn those nasty things in to the nice policeman :-)

On Mon, 05 Apr 1999 22:48:38 +1000, Ingmar Meins <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

<snip>
>
>I presume it's something really basic.. If I don't fix it soon I'll
>bring my nice shiny Glock home and "fix" windows 98 properly !
>




John McKee
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Democracy is three wolves and a sheep voting what to have for lunch.

------------------------------

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Jim Richardson)
Subject: Re: Fujitsu LB2 56k Modem
Date: 6 Apr 1999 02:01:32 GMT
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

On Fri, 02 Apr 1999 22:55:40 -0600, 
 Claudiu TOMA, in the persona of <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
 brought forth the following words...:

>
>Also, I check RedHat for a list of Linux-compatible modems... my modem
>didn't appear as a WinModem, but I saw other Fujitsu LifeBook in the
>C-series (mine is C340), having WinModems.
>
>Should I conclude that my modem is a WinModem? or should I try to
>configure my BIOS?
>What else can I do?
>
>Please reply at: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>Thanx!
>
>
I have the C340 also, and the modem appears to be a los^h^h^hwinmodem.
 But if someone could prove me wrong, I'd be hideously grateful :)

-- 
Jim Richardson
        www.eskimo.com/~warlock
All hail Eris
"Linux, because a cpu is a terrible thing to waste."


------------------------------


** FOR YOUR REFERENCE **

The service address, to which questions about the list itself and requests
to be added to or deleted from it should be directed, is:

    Internet: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

You can send mail to the entire list (and comp.os.linux.networking) via:

    Internet: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Linux may be obtained via one of these FTP sites:
    ftp.funet.fi                                pub/Linux
    tsx-11.mit.edu                              pub/linux
    sunsite.unc.edu                             pub/Linux

End of Linux-Networking Digest
******************************

Reply via email to