> -----Original Message-----
> From: owner-trlog@contesting.com [mailto:owner-trlog@contesting.com]On
> Behalf Of Kevin Schmidt
> Sent: Saturday, August 29, 1998 6:18 PM
> To: trlog@contesting.com
> Subject: Re: [TRLog] Internet Relay Chat (IRC) & TRlog
>
>
>
>
> "Igor Sokolov" <ua9cdc@dialup.mplik.ru> wrote
> >
> > >I do this often. Just give TR the serial port of your modem.
> > >Use your terminal emulation program (or control-B) to dial
> > >up your ISP and then telnet to the cluster (cluster.akron.net
> > >works). TR will then just think it is talking to a TNC.
> > >
> > >Tree
> >
> > I have tested the above. Does not work for me. I do it in Win95. Start
> > telnet program (CRT in my case), telnet to one of the sites where feed
> > from dx summit is available,start to get spottings. I start TRlog in a
> > dos box and when the program asks for the port where my tnc supposed to
> > be I give the port where modem is connected (serial 4 in my case). I
> > continue get spots on telnet app but nothing shows up in TRlog. What do
> > I do wrong?
> >
> > Igor, UA9CDC
> >
>
> I haven't seen any other answers.
>
> I think you have 2 problems. First, I think that with Windows 95 you
> will have to use TR to talk to the modem so that the port assignments
> are done correctly. I have never used Windows 95 so maybe that is not
> true. The second problem is that it sounds like you are using a PPP or
> SLIP connection to connect. TR can't use that.
It would be trivial to work around this with a more powerful or multiuser
operating system,
What would really be nice is to have Trlog use the winsock interface to do
this. I know it would be some coding but it would be a real enhancement. If
that were done you would not have to mess with these other things.
> but since Windows 95 is not multiuser I think there is no easy way to
> talk out one port and log into another. Two solutions are:
>
> 1. Get a "shell" account from your ISP. Typically this means you
> connect through the modem using TR to an account on a machine at your
> ISP, and then telnet from a command prompt there to wherever you want.
> I believe this is what Tree was describing.
>
> 2. Set up another computer to act as your shell account. The cheap way
> to do this is to use old 386 with 100MB of disk and 4MB of memory and
> run linux. A cheap 14K modem will be fine for this purpose. I have
> done this for various things and the easiest way to set it up is
> to borrow a keyboard and video card/monitor and either a CDROM drive or
> ethernet card to load the operating system. Once you are running you
> remove the CD or ethernet card, keyboard and possibly the video card,
> and tell the bios that you don't have a keyboard or video (some bioses
> require a video card, but in that case it can be any old card to make
> the bios happy; you definitely don't need a monitor). When you want to
> use it, you just turn it on and let it boot up. You then log in through
> a serial port from TR and fire up your PPP connection and telnet. Since
> TR is talking to the telnet connection everything will work fine.
> Anyone familiar with linux/unix can set this up in about an hour.
>
> I hope this helps,
> 73 Kevin w9cf
> =-------------------------------------------------------------
> Kevin Schmidt w9cf@ptolemy.la.asu.edu
> Department of Physics and Astronomy
> Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ 85287-1504
> (602) 965-8240
> (602) 965-7954 (FAX)
>
> --
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>
>
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