Hi John,

I'll try to dig into it a bit further as soon as I have a chance...

At the moment, the only thing that I see the keyboard daemon do explicitly
is open the serial port at 9600 and disable RTS/CTS in Handspring units as
the signals aren't present. I don't actually see the daemon setup the serial
port data/stop/parity settings directly. In a 3.5 OS Handspring system, the
open function of the sdrv sets up the (8-O-2) parameters, but perhaps it's
getting reset at a later point. I have less visibility into the default
behavior for the 3.1 serial driver...

Mike

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Thursday, March 29, 2001 9:26 PM
To: Palm Developer Forum
Subject: Re: Serial Port Conflict


Mike,
 Hmm, i've been using 9600, 8bits, noparity, & 1 stop bit.

 John Strong
 StrongWare

[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> 
> Hi John,
> 
> Cool stuff!
> 
> The keyboard daemon opens the port at 9600 baud. I believe the serial open
> function uses default settings of 8 data, odd parity and 2 stop bits.
> 
> Mike
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Thursday, March 29, 2001 4:28 AM
> To: Palm Developer Forum
> Subject: Re: Serial Port Conflict
> 
> Mike,
>  Thanks, I would have saved me a lot of hair pulling :)
>  I need to keep the little that I have .
> 
>  Once known, the RemoteUI daemon, is a great little feature.
>  No drivers need to connect to a keyboard, wish the Palms had it.
> 
>  I wrote a small program for the PC, that sends keyboard data to the
> serial cradle.
>  Just type on my pc, shows up on the visor.
> 
>  BTW, what is the default communcation specs for the RemoteUI daemon?
> 
>   John Strong
>   StrongWare
>

-- 
For information on using the Palm Developer Forums, or to unsubscribe,
please see http://www.palmos.com/dev/tech/support/forums/

-- 
For information on using the Palm Developer Forums, or to unsubscribe, please see 
http://www.palmos.com/dev/tech/support/forums/

Reply via email to