Re: good, external non-winmodem?



Tried that one, thanks! The proprietary modem is actually connected to com2
serial port....tried disabling it and letting windoze handle it...no luck.


"Steven Hilgendorf" <stevenmh@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:4vAWf.30276$iR1.1049@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Trailboss wrote:
Hey all, I built a system for a buddys security system. the software on
the system is proprietary and basically its used to take continuous
snapshots from the 15 cameras or so all around his liquor store. The
modem that came with the system has a problem, apparantly. He cant dial
into the software from home, as he used to be able to. He just gets busy
signal, but the line is a dedicated dial-up line with no other devices on
it. I actually put winME on a p4p800-e system as the software isnt
designed to run on 2k or XP. So, the modem (which is proprietary also, it
has their logo on it) is connected to com2 via serial, and when the
program is running (telxpert, its called) the modem seems "busy" all the
time. I open hyperterminal and try to run some AT commands to hang it up
and get errors. Go into control panel, use the modem diagnostics to query
the modem, and get "port already open".

Turn the program off, I can dial with the modem no prob...no more "port
already open" problems. So the software seems to be causing the prob, but
I would like to get another modem and see if the prob goes away. Are
external modems considered "non-winmodem"? hardware modems? I know the
p4p800-e has no ISA slots, only pci, so If I used an internal, it would
probably be winmodem yes? any thoughts?

I googled the "port already open" problem and tried every single thing I
could find from MS knowledge base...I'm stumped....sorry if this is OT...

Here's a thought... Did you try disabling the external COMM/Serial 2 port
in CMOS/Bios? Doing so should free up the IRQ, which can then be used by
the internal modem. This should also eliminate your 'port in use'
message.

Note, if you are not using either external serial/communication port, you
can disable both ports in CMOS/Bios. This should free up both IRQ3 and
IRQ4 for other hardware use.

Good luck,

Steven


.



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