Andres, and all,
A very interesting idea, though here in West Africa, the main limitation
in Linux adoption is not a lack of modem support, it is more to do with
a lack of knowledge about Linux and open source, and too many aid and
commercial organizations only touting or buying proprietary product.
Here there are very few computers at home and even fewer people who can
afford the incredibly expensive phone costs, that is the main reason
that few modems are used here. Those who can, can afford hardware modems
that supports Linux, as the monthly phone bill will well exceed. I was
at an internet cafe recently, who had to shut-down because in one month
their phone bill was over $350, twice their revenue. So, I think that
though this is a solid idea, and that it might have application in some
developing countries, here in West Africa modems and phone lines are the
last choice due to their expense.
Ian
On Mon, 2005-04-18 at 12:09 -0400,
linux-audio-dev-request(a)music.columbia.edu wrote:
Send linux-audio-dev mailing list submissions to
linux-audio-dev(a)music.columbia.edu
To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit
http://music.columbia.edu/mailman/listinfo/linux-audio-dev
or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to
linux-audio-dev-request(a)music.columbia.edu
You can reach the person managing the list at
linux-audio-dev-owner(a)music.columbia.edu
When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific
than "Re: Contents of linux-audio-dev digest..."
Today's Topics:
1. Re: crazy idea... (Andres Cabrera)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Message: 1
Date: Mon, 18 Apr 2005 11:14:30 -0500
From: Andres Cabrera <andres(a)geminiflux.com>
Subject: Re: [linux-audio-dev] crazy idea...
To: "The Linux Audio Developers' Mailing List"
<linux-audio-dev(a)music.columbia.edu>
Message-ID: <1113840867.3663.5.camel(a)localhost.localdomain>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8
Hi,
It would be fantastic if that crazy idea could be done! In my opinion a
big limitation for greater adoption of linux on third world countries
like Colombia where a broadband connection is still a luxury, is the
limited modem support.
I recently tried to find linux compatible modems and it was impossible
(or too expensive -around US$50) in the local market, so I had to ask my
brother (who lives in the US) to get me one from ebay which can cost
around US$15 incl. shipping.
Cheers,
Andrs
On Sat, 2005-04-16 at 02:04, Peter Zubaj wrote:
slmodem is for SmartLink modems (it has this in
licence) and it contans
binary part - it can not run on PPC or other processors.
I've seen somewhere project to write software modem, but it was not
finished and abandoned.
Peter Zubaj
torbenh(a)gmx.de wrote:
On Thu, Apr 14, 2005 at 03:27:02PM -0700, Stephen
Hassard wrote:
Hey Lee,
I was thinking about this a little bit and it's probably easier than it
sounds.
I thought that Alsa already supported MC97 based AMR modems? It looks
like it does with the SND_INTEL8X0M module ..
Also, you wouldn't have to worry about injecting stuff into the
networking layer since modems are just character devices in linux.
The only real part would be the DSP stuff. Their might be some other
projects to do this kind of stuff already ..
the slmodemd is already a user space app.
and it has an alsa mode already. though it did not work when i tested
it.
later,
Steve
Lee Revell wrote:
>I had the idea the other day that you could theoretically implement a
>Winmodem driver as a JACK client. All you would need is an ALSA driver
>that exposes the hardware part of the modem as a sound card, a mechanism
>to inject the resulting bits back into the kernel networking layer, and
>the DSP knowledge to implement a software modem...
>
>This is almost completely pointless, but might be an interesting CS
>project.
>
>Lee
>
>
>
------------------------------
_______________________________________________
linux-audio-dev mailing list
linux-audio-dev(a)music.columbia.edu
http://music.columbia.edu/mailman/listinfo/linux-audio-dev
End of linux-audio-dev Digest, Vol 19, Issue 33
***********************************************
--
Ian Howard
IESC/Geekcorps Mali "les volontaires de l'informatique"
coordinateur de programme
--------------------------------------------------
geekcorps (
http://maligeekcorps.org)
ihoward(a)geekcorps.org
bureau/office: +223 221 49 43
mobile: +223 640 30 40
Porte 1085, Rue 240, Bamako, Mali