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[Sop.Tec.LinuxPPP] ˇEncontré artículo sobre Linmodems!!



Hola lista:

Encontré un artículo que será de interés para todos los que aún tenemos que
utilizar "Winbugs" para navegar por internet:

Ubicación original: http://www.idg.net/crd_modem_79744.html

PC-TEL announces new LinModem
The announcement of the industry's first Linux-compatible software modem
Summary
PC-TEL announces the immediate availability of its new software modem for
Linux. Will the mass market bite? How about the Linux community? (1,000
words)
By Nora Mikes


August 2, 1999 -- PC-TEL, a five-year-old company specializing in software
modems for the Microsoft market, announced today that the industry's first
Linux-compatible software modem is available to OEMs immediately.
Software modems are attractive to OEMs because they drive down overall
system cost; however, they also require valuable CPU capacity in order to
operate. Even on a powerful 400-MHz processor, a software modem can demand
as much as 10 to 15 percent of the CPU's total throughput. This is a high
price to pay for hard-core Linux users, like those that make up the consumer
base of Penguin Computing, an OEM specializing in high-end Linux computers.

Sam Ockman, Penguin Computing's CEO, told LinuxWorld that his customers
would accept a software modem if it offered "the throughput as with a
traditional modem, and no noticeable degradation of performance from the CPU
side." Although a hardware modem can cost up to five times more than a
software modem, they are still relatively cheap, with a current price tag at
$100 for a high-quality model, he said. "Most of our customers like the idea
of traditional modems where the processing is done on the modem -- but it's
always good to have other options available," he added.

PC-TEL engineers don't disagree with Ockman's assessment that hardware
modems aren't likely to disappear anytime soon. "I think that [in the
future], a hardware modem will be a high-end, luxury item," said William
Hsu, software manager for PC-TEL.

But the hard-core Linux user isn't PC-TEL's target market. In fact, the end
user isn't PC-TEL's target market at all, as the company sells exclusively
to OEMs and PC and data communications equipment manufacturers.

According to Steve Manuel, vice president of marketing for PC-TEL, these
OEMs are eager to leverage the "free-as-in-beer" quality of the Linux
operating system to help drive down costs for mass-market consumer systems.
Because "most customers purchase these systems for Internet access, there is
a real need for the same sort of ... cost-effective connectivity that has
made software modems the fastest growing connectivity solution in the
Microsoft Windows market," he said.

Ockman sees the value of this approach. "Any options that allow Linux
appliances to be more inexpensive to the consumer [are] good, but [the
option] needs to be examined to see if it makes sense," he said. "The
question is, do people really need Linux-based iToasters that plug into the
phone?"

Dan Kusnetzky, program director at International Data Corporation, is
cautious about the consumer market. "There are a number of vendors trying to
make a market in [cheap, Linux-based] systems" for the consumer market, he
said. But Kusnetzky offered an alternate scenario, suggesting that large
nationwide retailers or other companies requiring thousands of simple boxes
that access larger systems might be an attractive potential market for
LinModem-enabled machines.

Whether in consumer, retail, or other markets, the decision to invest in a
LinModem box is likely to be based on advice from opinion leaders in the
Linux community. Thus, while hard-core Linux users aren't PC-TEL's target
market, the company is very aware of at least some of that community's
concerns regarding software-based modems.

Traditionally, software modems have had a bad reputation in the Linux
community. In fact, they've earned the nickname "WinModems," because many
are "optimized" to work with the Microsoft Windows operating system, and
refuse to cooperate with any other OS.

(In fact, the word WinModem is a trademark of 3Com, and software modems for
the Windows operating system are often marketed under the name
"WinModem." -- Editor)

Even more irritating, at least in the eyes of the open source community, is
the fact that there is usually little or no documentation for such software
modems, and so developers who might want to write a Linux-compatible
interface to WinModems have no specifications or other documentation on
which to base such an effort.

This same lack of documentation can also force WinModem owners to upgrade
their software modems unnecessarily when they wish to upgrade their
operating system -- because new versions of the Microsoft operating system
often lack support for older WinModems. Without documentation, users have no
way of addressing this compatibility problem on their own.

In an interview with LinuxWorld, PC-TEL indicated that, because it is now
catering to the more sophisticated crowd of end users in the Linux market,
it is evaluating the possibility of releasing more documentation for the
Linux-compatible MicroModem on its Web site. In the past, such information
has been released to end users on written request -- an approach that still
may be used if documentation isn't publicly posted.

PC-TEL said that it would like to ensure that end users have the information
they need in the event that an OEM, or even PC-TEL itself, were to decide to
cut off support for a particular OS or implementation. In that case, the
company would release the necessary documentation, so that the end users
would not be orphaned.


------------------------------------------------------------
¡Saludos!
Joel Barrios Dueñas
5684-5082
admin en jjnet prohosting com
jjnetmagazine en hotmail com
http://www.jjnet.prohosting.com
http://www.jjnet.prohosting.com/linux
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