MATLEVAN@EKU (Jerry LeVan) (11/12/90)
Hello, We recently obtained one! T1000 Telebit modem for our CS lab. I was thinking of buying a T2500 for "home" use to connect to the lab. I am currently using a Practical Peripherals 2400 baud modem.(Works fine, great price). I just got the data sheet on the T2500 and there are some questions that I would like to have answered. The data sheet says that there is a TALK/DATA switch. Question 1: Does this mean that I will have to manually press the button to data before makeing a data call? and if I forget to reset the switch after the data call will future callers be greeted with a scream? (I have autoanswer turned off on my pp modem and I can use it for voice and outgoing data calls). The data sheet says that there is an RJ45 line connector. Questions 2: I *thought* phones used and RJ11 connector. Would I have to get a special connector put on my phone line? (and are there two "plugs' on the back of the modem so I can use the phone and modem on the same line?) Question 3: Does the T2500 work well with the MacOS and A/UX 2.0? I have used a Mac II with a 9600 baud connection elsewhere and was not very pleased with the results. The Mac does not seem to be able to draw characters very fast and I/O was very herky jerky. Seems like using "cu" would make matters even worse. In reguards to A/UX and cu, It appears to me that Apple has hardwired in the ATD command (the fourth entry in the L.sys entry for a system gets prepended with an ATD and sent to the modem). Would this cause any problems? Tip seems to add slightly more functionality than cu, however I have not been able to get tip to work at 2400 baud with the Practical Peripherals modem. (1200 baud worked fine). Has anybody out there been able to get tip to work at speeds > 1200 with a Hayes compatible modem? Much of my work is interactive, but I occasionaly need to get large files (TeX, X etc...) Any feedback would be appreciated. Jerry ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- | Jerry LeVan | Phone:(606)-622-1931 | | Department of Computer Science | | | Eastern Kentucky University | Email:matlevan@eku.bitnet | | Richmond Ky 40475 | | |---------------------------------------------------------------------------| | "The series converges so slowly that it actually diverges." | -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
alexis@panix.uucp (Alexis Rosen) (11/13/90)
MATLEVAN@EKU (Jerry LeVan) writes: >I just got the data sheet on the T2500 [...] > >The data sheet says that there is a TALK/DATA switch. >Question 1: Does this mean that I will have to manually > press the button to data before makeing a data call? > and if I forget to reset the switch after the data > call will future callers be greeted with a scream? No. You don't have to do this. It has some special functions (you can get it to initiate calls by using this button). You'll probably never use it. >The data sheet says that there is an RJ45 line connector. >Questions 2: I *thought* phones used and RJ11 connector. Would > I have to get a special connector put on my phone line? > (and are there two "plugs' on the back of the modem so > I can use the phone and modem on the same line?) No problem. They supply appropriate cabling. Yes, there are two plugs. >Question 3: Does the T2500 work well with the MacOS and A/UX 2.0? Yes. Aren't any postings of mine reaching your site? >I have used a Mac II with a 9600 baud connection elsewhere and was >not very pleased with the results. The Mac does not seem to be able >to draw characters very fast and I/O was very herky jerky. Seems like >using "cu" would make matters even worse. Not so. It depends upon how smart/stupid your telecom app is. Certainly, it take more juice to move bitmaps around than it would for character-based stuff. Cu works OK, though. >In reguards to A/UX and cu, It appears to me that Apple has hardwired >in the ATD command (the fourth entry in the L.sys entry for a system >gets prepended with an ATD and sent to the modem). Would this cause >any problems? Why should it? Anyway, you can always say "dir" at the end of the cu to just grab the modem without dialing anything. >Tip seems to add slightly more functionality than cu, however I have >not been able to get tip to work at 2400 baud with the Practical >Peripherals modem. (1200 baud worked fine). Have you created the appropriate entry for 2400bps operation in all the right places? See the man page... --- Alexis Rosen Owner/Sysadmin, PANIX Public Access Unix, NY {cmcl2,apple}!panix!alexis