> On 10/17/05, Gideon N. Guillen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:   
> > On 10/17/05, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:   
> > > Do you have a link in support of your assertion?   
>    
> Well, it seems that the Jetway modem might work. I looked at the .inf   
> files on the Windows drivers. It seems that the modem is actually a   
> serial modem with a USB-to-RS232 chipset. What I don't know is if the   
> chipset is compatible with Linux.   
 
Thanks for the pointer. Does this mean it would get recognized 
as /dev/ttyUSB0 (USB serial converter) rather than /dev/ttyACM0? You 
don't happen to have any access to the modem itself? A page on the Jetway 
site says their 56K USB modem uses a Topic chip. 
  
http://www.jetway.com.tw/evisn/product/modem/usb/usb.htm   
  
A check with modem-help.com shows that the chipset is manufactured by IC  
Plus Semiconductor, a company with fewer than 300 Google hits. This  
doesn't look promising. 

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