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- Path: sparky!uunet!haven.umd.edu!darwin.sura.net!sgiblab!sgigate!olivea!bunker!sheldev.shel.isc-br.com!wtm
- From: barth@nodc2.nodc.noaa.gov (Dick Barth)
- Newsgroups: misc.handicap
- Subject: TDD modems and software
- Message-ID: <25801@handicap.news>
- Date: 23 Nov 92 20:16:48 GMT
- Sender: news@bunker.shel.isc-br.com
- Reply-To: barth@nodc2.nodc.noaa.gov (Dick Barth)
- Lines: 63
- Approved: wtm@hnews.fidonet.org
- X-Fidonet: Silent Talk Conference
- Originator: wtm@sheldev.shel.isc-br.com
-
- Index Number: 25801
-
- In Digest 3017, Mike Harris said...
-
- > From: morris@grian.cps.altadena.ca.us (Mike Morris)
- > Organization: College Park Software, Altadena, CA
- > ...
- >
- > Apparently a request came in to his Lions club for a software program
- > that will allow a PC equipped with a modem to function as a TDD
- > answering machine, and as a TDD.
- >
- > While I myself know nothing about TDDs, I do remember from a old article
- > in a ham radio magazine that TDDs use a special set of tones (at lease
- > the early ones did), and no standard modem (i.e. a 3/12/2400 baud) will
- > talk to them. So I told my friend that a special modem would probably
- > be needed. this would not be a problem, if we knew where to get it.
- >
- > Can somebody point us to some decent software? My friend said that he's
- > looking "for a TDD version of ProComm or Telix or Boyan, plus a TDD
- > answering machine function."
- >
-
- You have a good memory, Mike. You're right -- the standard TDD
- uses an oddball tone pair (1400 MARK, 1800 SPACE) that will talk to
- another TDD but not to an ASCII modem. TDDs use the Baudot code,
- which makes them incompatible with standard comm programs. The TDD
- modem uses the same tone pair in both directions. If all this
- sounds very much like the RTTY communications you've seen on ham
- radio it is. This may be because Dr. Robert Weitbrecht, who
- invented the TDD, was a ham. :-)
-
- There are certain TDDs -- primarily the newer and more expensive
- ones -- that have a built-in ASCII capability. These usually talk
- at 110 or 300 baud. Some also are able to answer phone calls and
- take short messages.
-
- Early computers had a cassette port, used to generate tones that
- could be recorded on tape and later read files back from the tape
- recorder. These ports could also be used to generate and receive
- TDD tones from the phone line, and public domain software is
- available to do this on an (original) IBM-PC, a PCjr and a Radio
- Shack Color Computer. Current versions are TDD ver 5.6 (for the
- IBM pair) and TDD ver. 4.3 (for the CoCo). Both are downloadable
- from file area two of the HEX BBS as TDD56.ZIP; see the
- .signature below for phone number.
-
- Any old computer can talk to a TDD using a special modem and
- software. Both are commercially available. For a list, download
- the file COMPARE.TTY from the same place. Some of these products
- can also function as answering machines for TDD and/or 300 baud
- ASCII calls. I use the Phone-TTY model CM-4 modem on the HEX, with
- software I wrote, to run a BBS with ASCII/TDD capability on one
- phone line while it uses a standard Hayes clone on the other.
-
- 73
-
- --
- HEX - the Handicapped Educational Exchange BBS
- 301-593-7033 (TDD, 300 baud) -- 301-593-7357 (300/1200/2400 baud ASCII)
- Dick Barth, W3HWN Internet: barth@nodc2.nodc.noaa.gov
-
- ..
-