lbert359@pallas.athenanet.com (Lee Bertagnolli) (02/20/91)
I have recently endeavored to install an Equinox Megaports 12-port board in my AT&T 6386E (20MHz Olivetti-built) running AT&T Sys V 3.2.3. There seems to be some sort of conflict. When the board is physically installed in the system, the floppy drives are no longer accessible (which makes it rather difficult to install the device drivers :-). Equinox has suggested that there is a PAL upgrade to the Olivetti motherboard, but AT&T does not acknowledge that any such upgrade exists (I talked with my local service guys *and* called the hotline, but nobody knew anything). Equinox has sent me two different boards, but to no avail. This is particularly frustrating. The AT&T supplied IPC boards aren't worth a darn. I had a DigiBoard C/X board, which worked great, but costs nearly twice the money as the Megaports. Does anybody have any ideas? -- + Lee Bertagnolli + Voice: (217) 529-0359 + + West Lake Computers + Data: (217) 529-0261 + + 34 Hazel Lane + UUCP: {uunet}!pallas!lbert359 + + Springfield, Illinois 62707 + Internet: lbert359@athenanet.com +
norm@cfctech.cfc.com (Norman J. Meluch) (02/20/91)
lbert359@pallas.athenanet.com (Lee Bertagnolli) writes: {L} This is particularly frustrating. The AT&T supplied IPC boards aren't worth {L} a darn. Lee. Seems that both you and I have had our troubles with AT&T. However, with release of ver 3.0 of their IPC software, I find AT&T's boards to be quite useful for most any "PC" serial port application that you need. Either from UNIX (tm) or via a network application (shared modem or printer). I wouldn't go dogging them without specific examples. To date we run HP Laserjets (500,II, & III), share spoolers, serial to parallel converters, modems, and Okidata printers off our IPC 802 boards with *absolutely* no troubles. Although abit awkward in size, the 802 board performs quite well and I am very pleased with them. I have not had any experience with the (smaller EPORTS-like) 900 series of the IPC boards, but rumor has been that they perform equally well. - Norm. -- |~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Norman J. Meluch ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~| | Mail: norm@cfctech.cfc.com Fax:(313)948-4975 Voice:(313)948-4809 | | Note: The opinions expressed here are in no way to be confused with valid | |_______ideas or corporate policy.____________________________________________|
john@banzai.PCC.COM (John Canning) (02/24/91)
In article <1991Feb20.141511.6085@cfctech.cfc.com> norm@cfctech.cfc.com (Norman J. Meluch) writes: > >However, with release of ver 3.0 of their IPC software, I find AT&T's boards >to be quite useful for most any "PC" serial port application that you need. >Either from UNIX (tm) or via a network application (shared modem or printer). > AT&T is now up version 4.0 of their IPC driver software for the IPC-802 and IPC-900 cards. Version 3.0 is very important for the IPC-802 card - it will lock up continuously if you have a lower version driver. The 4.0 drivers seem to do a better job with modems than the 3.0 drivers.