
Here is the product page:
https://backofficeshow.com/shop/retronetpcb
Here is the video I was watching:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QvC7K5DRSDA
Thanks!
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Ok, thanks! Hopefully this will work, it looks like a neat, low-cost solution to getting the VIC online.srowe wrote:Depends on what the lowest baud rate it supports. The VIC can only do up to 2400 baud, and flow control is a problem. You'd have to use a software method like XON/XOFF as the KERNEL routines don't support symmetric RTS/CTS hardware flow control.
Ok, interesting. Thanks! Does the WiModem accept the Hayes command set? If not, what commands are used to interface with it?Mike wrote:RetroNET is no fundamentally different from what can already be done with a WiModem (see here).
Except WiModem directly plugs into the userport, and RetroNET requires yet another set of level shifters to adapt the signals between TTL and RS232C. If you have a VIC-1011A and a RS232C 25pin-to-9pin-adapter/cable handy, you're already there, of course.
Those devices merely provide a bridge between RS232C and WLAN - they need the necessary infrastructure on the WLAN side and corresponding software on the VIC side to get anything useful done.
Indeed. My pleasure! Yes. {ε}Gorf wrote:Ok, interesting. Thanks! Does the WiModem accept the Hayes command set? If not, what commands are used to interface with it?Mike wrote:RetroNET is no fundamentally different from what can already be done with a WiModem (see here).
Except WiModem directly plugs into the userport, and RetroNET requires yet another set of level shifters to adapt the signals between TTL and RS232C. If you have a VIC-1011A and a RS232C 25pin-to-9pin-adapter/cable handy, you're already there, of course.
Those devices merely provide a bridge between RS232C and WLAN - they need the necessary infrastructure on the WLAN side and corresponding software on the VIC side to get anything useful done.