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Re: kernel version 2.2.16-22
Jude
The original RS232C protocol used that 25-pin D-connector with
many signals
exchanged. At some point, IBM stripped it down to a few signals
on a 9-pin
D-connector. Many manufacturers saved a few pennies by leaving
out unused
pins (unimplemented signals or redundant grounds) when providing
a 25-pin
D-commector for the serial connection.
If you cannot easily find the respective pinouts for the 25- and
9-pin
RS232C connectors, email me and I will send a copy to you.
Yes, you could connect your two computers together at their
serial ports
with a "null-modem" cable and send your files that way. You also
could
use one of the many free or shareware programs to split your file
into
several "floppy-size" files. Usually, you need to use the same
splitter
program at both ends -- to split for sending, and to recombine at
the
receiving end. Often, I just use the "copy-concatenate" facility
of the
shell to recombine, being careful to match things up correctly.
Moe Aitel
--------------------------------
Jude DaShiell wrote:
>
> I have no doubt emacspeak 15 is compatible with doubletalk. However it's
> larger than a 1.44mb floppy can hold and I'm downloading on another dos box
> and putting files onto the linux system with a floppy disk. The second
> serial card connection on the dos box is strange. The connector is big
> enough for a 25 hole connector but it hasn't got 25 pins in it. If I can
> get that sorted out, maybe I can take over the linux box with the dos box
> and commo running and get more working. I had only downloaded the
> emacspeak-12.01-i386.rpm file from matt campbell's site and think maybe I
> should have also downloaded the tarball for that version as well. In any
> case, I got the variables defined in .bash_profile in /root since I've had
> to do this stuff from root to get emacspeak working and env >env.log shows
> the variables defined as I had intended after rebooting the computer. So I
> tried tcl ./doubletalk and heard the voices speak again, but I was not
> returned by the doubletalk server to the operating system prompt again.
> There was just silence after the last voice had announced itself, think
> there were six voices in all. So I hit control-c and also hit control-\ and
> one of those two ended the session and I had heard the doubletalk server had
> done a core dump. Probably as a result of me shutting it off that way. Not
> having heard the operating system prompt I didn't know if all commands to
> the system would have worked after those voices had announced themselves.
>
> Jude <dashiell@xxxxxxxxxxx>
>
> Net-Tamer V 1.13 Beta - Registered
>
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