What is a Modem?
A modem is a device your computer uses to send and receive
electronic data through your phone line. It connects your computer to
your phone line, giving you access to the internet and the World Wide
Web. The modem may live inside your computer (internal modem) on a
"modem card," or may be connected by serial cable outside your
computer (external modem). Your telephone line plugs into the modem
on one end, and into a telephone wall (RJ-11) jack on the other.
Your modem also plugs into one of your computer’s
communications ports such as "COM1" or "COM2" (often labeled
"serial 1" or "serial 2"). If your computer has only one serial port,
it most likely is COM1; if it has two, one will be COM1 and one will
be COM2. Computers using a serial mouse often will plug it into the
"COM1" port (unless the computer is equipped with a special mouse
port), leaving only the COM2 port for connecting a modem.
When you set up your computer, you must tell the operating system
which "COM port" you are using for your telephone line, the type and
speed of modem you are using, and other information about using the
communications port (many software products can now do this for you).
Although the Windows 3.x operating system does not include any
built-in capability for automatically detecting your brand of modem,
the CNC Internet Access Kit's installation program comes equipped
with a vast list of modem configurations and is usually capable of
automatically setting one up for you.
You should need the following steps for configuring your modem
ONLY if Concentric's installer had difficulty automatically detecting
and configuring your modem for you.
Steps to Configure Your Modem and COM Ports
- Make sure a telephone line connects your modem to your
computer’s communications port (sometimes called a "serial
port" or "IOIOI"), and that your modem is plugged into a standard
phone jack.
- Double-click the Windows 3.x Control Panel icon from inside
the Main Group.
- Double-click on the Ports icon.
- Double-click the icon corresponding to the COM port you want
to configure, or click once on it, then click on the "Settings"
button. If you have two serial ports on your computer, you are
generally safe selecting COM2.
- Set the modem speed (baud rate) at 14,400 or higher (depending
on the capabilities of your modem). Bear in mind that data
compression permits data transfers at rates considerably higher
than your modem speed. Some "28,800-baud" modems can transfer at
speeds up to 115,200 baud, for instance.
- Set the preferences for connecting to CNC at 8-N-1:
8 Data bits
No Parity
1 Stop bit.
- Set the flow control setting to "hardware" unless you know
that your modem does not support this (in which case, set it to
"Xon/Xoff").
- The default settings revealed by clicking the "Advanced"
button are preferred for most situations and should be changed by
advanced users only if necessary.
- To reinstall your modem selection you will need to run your
dialer. To do this,
-
- From your CNC window, double-click the "Concentric Network
Dialer" icon.
- Click the "Properties" button.
- Click the Modem tab.
- Click on the "Change modem" button and select your modem
from the list.
- If your modem does not appear on the list, first try the
"Hayes compatible" setting. If this does not work, try the
"Other Windows modem" setting.
- Click the OK button when you are done.
- Make sure your modem and phone line are not in use by any
other program.
Give Me Just the Settings
CNC’s Local Access Numbers operate at a maximum standard baud
rate of 28,800, which, with data compression set, can exceed
throughput speeds of 56,000, with occasional burst speeds up to
115,200 baud. Standard Modem Settings Are:
Baud Rate: 14,400 or higher
RTS/CTS Hardware Flow Control: Enabled (superior to XON/XOFF
(software) control).
Data bits: 8
Stop bits: 1
Parity: N
Additional modem considerations:
- Your modem may not consistently connect at its rated baud
rate. If the difference is small (such as connecting at 26,400
instead of 28,800 baud), this may be normal. Sometimes the actual
data transmission rate is slowed down due to the connection grade
or the physical type of connection you have.
- DTR operation should be set to normal and DCD operation should
be set to normal.
- Avoid gender and serial cable pin adapters (they may introduce
potential line interference). Line "noise" can cause your
connection to consistently slow down or drop altogether.
- If your computer’s communications card is an older model,
it may have a slower and less reliable UART chip such as the 8550.
You will get higher speeds (higher than 9600 baud) and greater
reliability if you replace it with a newer UART chip such as the
16550 UART.
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