[GreenKeys] Hmpf... Heavy metal doen't work....

Paul Wills [email protected]
Mon, 21 Jan 2002 21:24:01 -0500


He wants the *other* RTTYart.  It's at:

http://www.rtty.com/development/software/index.html

PDW


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Bill Buzbee" <[email protected]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Monday, January 21, 2002 9:07 PM
Subject: Re: [GreenKeys] Hmpf... Heavy metal doen't work....


> Philipp Hachtmann writes:
> > 
> > Thank you for quick answer :-)
> > 
> > Bill Buzbee schrieb:
> > > 
> > >   The first thing I would do is try William Bytheway's RTTYArt
> > > program.  Let me know if RTTYArt work for you, but Heavy Metal
> > > doesn't. 
> > Where to get?
> 
> A quick trip to google shows:
> 
> http://www.wetnet.ampr.org/~aa6ed/software/
> 
> However, William Bytheway is active on this list - is there a
> better place to get it?
> 
> > 
> > > Except when it tries to go behind Windows' back to
> > > directly twiddle with the UART to set the odd baud rates, Heavy Metal
> > > uses the serial port in a fairly standard way.
> > Hm.... I don't understand why it doesn't work :-(
> 
> Could you give a bit more detail about your failure mode?  Can
> you send OK, but just not receive?  Perhaps I did not initialize
> the ports correctly and the windows driver is expecting some odd
> handshaking.
> 
> > 
> > >  Note, though, that
> > > there may be problems if you are using Windows COM ports other
> > > than COM1: and COM2:.  If so, email me directly for details.
> > I used com2....
> 
> The issue is that Heavy Metal thinks it knows the port addresses of
> the various com devices.  It turns out that except for COM1: and COM2:,
> your address may vary.  In the current version of Heavy Metal, it
> thinks COM2: lives at 0x2f8.  If your's does not, then that may be
> the problem.
>  
> > 
> > Hm.. If it doesn't work at all I will have to write an own application.
> > Or reuse my linux device driver for teleprinter....
> 
> If you're running Linux, you might try the Perl version of Heavy Metal
> directly.  It uses setserial rather than try to do things directly, and
> is much cleaner in general.  Heavy Metal was written on Linux, and then
> ported to Windows.
> 
> > 
> > 
> > Yours,
> > Philipp.
> > 
> > P.S.: What's Transmeta?
> 
> It's a company that makes the Crusoe low-power microprocessors.  We
> were in the news quite a bit a couple of years ago, in part because
> one of my coworkers is Linus Torvalds.
> 
> ...Bill Buzbee
> 
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