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Re: [hylafax-users] No response to MPS or EOP repeated 3 tries
- To: HylaFax Mailing List <hylafax-users@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Subject: Re: [hylafax-users] No response to MPS or EOP repeated 3 tries
- From: An Intrepid HylaFax User <hylafax@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Fri, 10 Oct 2003 05:30:15 -0700
> I suspect, though, that most serious developers are using Class 2 or 2.0
> modems.
Hah!
We *DREAM* of using our modems in Class 2/2.0 operation. But we lose the
battle of the (impossible to achieve) compatibility wars and retreat back to
Class 1 operation. It gives us more successes than failures at least. With
every modem I've tried, USR, Supra, et al, I get strange and repeatable
problems with sending or receiving faxes in Class 2.0, which go away when I
switch to Class 1. I'm crossing my fingers with the new Multitech ZBA V.92
modem I just received.
Maybe it will succeed where others have failed.
I am still wondering, as a prior list poster did - what exactly is so
problematic about making computer faxmodems behave as interoperably as $30
fax machines which have a printer, scanner, modem, and a self-contained
power supply?
I blame the ITU / Global Engineering for super-expensive protocol/standards
documentation. I remember in my SCSI and CD-ROM engineering days having to
fork hundreds to those ... "people" (desired word deleted for polite
company) for crummy fifth-generation photocopies of standards, or paying
$5,000 to Philips for the CD Information Agreement to get the various
"coloured" books.
I guess what's happened is that engineers just "winged it" on
incomplete/scattered documentation and "well it worked for me" engineering
standards.
I can appreciate the value of proprietary information and all, but what
exactly IS the purpose of keeping such old and commonly used "standards" so
difficult to obtain?
=Rob=
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