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The Answer Guy


By James T. Dennis, tag@lists.linuxgazette.net
Starshine Technical Services, http://www.starshine.org/


(?)WinModem and WinPrinters --- Just Say "No!"

From Richard Storey on 15 May 1998

I am in the process of gearing up to install Linux and so forth on a new HD. I read a few days ago that Win modems, which I have in the form of a US Robotics 56k X2 voice modem, bla, bla, leave off some of the on-board chips which normally carry on some functions of the modem. The article said that the modem drivers take over these functions and pass the load over to the CPU. That's not good, but my thoughts are that if this is true and Windows is supposed to be running for these drivers will this keep me from being able to run the modem while in Linux?

(!) I'm afraid you're stuck. Last I heard these companies won't release the specs. Don't buy any more of these modems and printers.

My fear is that a certain software company (no names but the initials are "Microsoft") will see the WinModems and WinPrinters as the amazing boon and raging success that they are (for MS OS') and encourage the development of more lobotomized, cut rate peripherals, components and whole systems.

Reading between the lines about Microsoft/Intel's PC98 "recommendations" (http://www.microsoft.com/hwdev/pc98.htm) I see plenty of opportunity for proprietary, non-disclosed software drivers to be required for system operation.

If I was a "mad scientist" and I wanted to control the PC marketplace and keep it safe from free software (open source or otherwise) I'd run the scam like this:

Not that any of this is happening.... or is it?

(?) Hoping I'm not stuck with buying another modem right now.
RS

(!) Call USR and give them a piece of your mind. Let them know that you might be willing to let your CPU take the load IF you had some choice in what OS your system was running.

However, there is nothing in the hardware market today that is quite so odious has having no choice about the software that drives your peripherals. This is especially true of modems and printers which had been pretty reasonably standardized for almost 20 years (before the PC was even marketed by IBM we at Hayes AT command set for modems and printers that could take simple parallel text output).

(?) More on 'WinModems': How to "Lose" Gracefully

Score:
Winmodems: 1
Free Software Users: 0

From Richard Storey on 18 May 1998

[Sorry for sending the whole thing back to you but I figured you must get ton of mail and don't always know who's is what!]

(!) Yes, I do. However, a small excerpt is usually sufficient to jog the ol' noggin

(?) Thanks for the essay. I never expected such a thoughtful and extensive response. This choir says Amen! The Winmodem was in small print, but I still, at that time didn't know that some of the functions were dumped off to the software.

The funny thing is that IBM wrote the drivers for it and they are not working properly. I updated the modem's firmware to V.90 and now the comm/port gets hung up, requiring a reboot to reinstall on a regular basis. I spent 6 hours on the phone today with IBM tech support doing brain surgery on my system solve it to no avail. My next strategy is to get them to take it back.

(!) Hmm. Typical. The firmware upgade probably doesn't work with the software drives.

Obviously you should do your best to get them to take it back. It isn't fullfulling your requirements. When enough of us as consumers can communicate our needs to enough vendors --- they will meet them, or other, new vendors will take over the niche.

(?) Anyway, my next step is to plan out my software uses, make a full effort to dump windoze entirely, and start a support group for former windows users (the abused) and those who would like to get out of abusive relationships with PC operating systems. ;-))

Cheers --RS

(!) Sounds like a veteran of some 12 step program.

Hmmm....
  1. Admitted we were powerless over proprietary OS'
  2. Came to believe that access to source code could restore our systems to usability and stability.
  3. Made a conscious descision to turn our systems into workstations.(*)
. . .

... we could work on that list --- at the risk of giving offense....

There are some excellent Linux Users Groups forming across the world. There are also at least three actively maintained lists of LUGS:
LUGR (LUG Registry)
http://www.linux.org/users/index.html
GLUE (Groups of Linux Users Everywhere)
http://www.linuxresources.com/glue/
LUG List
http://www.nllgg.nl/lugww/
There are also HOW-TO's on forming users groups (http://www.linuxresources.com/LDP/HOWTO/User-Group-HOWTO.html) and on "Advocacy" (http://www.linuxresources.com/LDP/HOWTO/mini/Advocacy.html). Finally there is a fairly new and relatively quiet mailing list for LUG organizers at: lug_support@ntlug.org (subscribe with an appropriate message to majordomo@ntlug.org and read the North Texas Linux Users Group web pages, http://www.ntlug.org/ for details).
(*) This is an inside reference to the various 12 step programs such as Alcoholics Anonymous. No, I'm not a member (and it would fly in the face of their traditions to announce it "at the level of press, TV, or radio"). However, I am close to a number of recovering addicts and alcoholics. You can find out more at:
Alcoholics Anonymous Web Site
http://www.alcoholics-anonymous.org/
... and at an unofficial and more heartwarming site:
http://webhome.idirect.com/~avroarow/P6.HTM


Copyright © 1998, James T. Dennis
Published in Linux Gazette Issue 29 June 1998


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