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- WEIRDBENCH
- Pie a la Modem
- July 1993
-
- Copyright 1993 Daniel J. Barrett
-
- Many true Amiga fanatics have modems connected to their computers,
- or even directly to their brains. But how many of us truly understand how
- these miraculous yet mysterious devices work? Do YOU understand? I sure
- don't! But that won't stop me from explaining it anyway, and in great
- detail. This article will tell you more than any sane person would ever
- want to know about telecommunications, modem protocols, and how to waste
- your life in front of the screen.
-
- Our first big question is: where did modems come from anyway?
- Well, a bunch of years ago, a generic famous person answered his telephone
- and discovered, to his surprise, that it was emitting strange, high-pitched
- noises. Believing that this was an attempt by space aliens to contact
- humans, he built a device that could turn the weird noises into text.
- Sadly, this resulted in failure, mainly because the noises were actually
- being produced by some squirrels chewing on the phone lines. But the
- inventor decided to sell his failed device anyway; and through brilliant
- marketing, modems are now in common use for non-extraterrestrial purposes.
-
- Interestingly enough, there is some new, controversial evidence
- that modems were actually used back in Paleolithic times! Archaeologists
- have discovered what appears to be a primitive FAXmodem carved out of stone.
- It communicates at a paltry 0.0003 baud and has no flashy lights on the front
- panel, but it appears to have been sufficient to transmit important business
- memos such as, "Meeting tomorrow, sunrise. Bring mastodon."
-
- The word "modem," according to a bunch of random computer geeks I
- asked, is supposedly an abbreviation for "MOdulator/DEModulator." But
- truthfully, it's an acronym for "Mounds Of Data Emitted Melodiously," in
- honor of the screeching sounds your roommate hears when he unwittingly
- picks up the hall phone, disconnecting your four-hour-long download.
-
- So what are those screechy noises anyway? Well, they are an
- audible "encoding" of your data, transmitted to another modem using a
- communications protocol, which is a techno-geek term meaning "screechy
- noises." There are many such protocols, all with fun, cryptic names like
- "MNP-5," "V.42," "OB-GYN," etc. What do these mean? Essentially,
- they are ratings of how many flashy lights are on the modem's front panel.
- The more "protocols" your modem supports, the more lights it has. An
- extreme example of this fad is seen in the popular SuperFAXModem V.32bis,
- which has a whopping 64 lights (yes, the lights continually make "whopping"
- sounds) that continually change and spell out insulting messages on the
- display.
-
- Once you have settled on the features you want and purchased a
- modem, the only other component you need is a telecommunications program.
- (Well, you might also want someplace to connect to, but this is a trivial
- detail. The important thing is to have the modem and software so you can
- brag to all your hacker friends about what a "Cool Dood" you are because
- you can spell "BBS".)
-
- Anyway, let's suppose you have your telecomm program and modem all
- set up and running. You click on a a "dial" gadget or some such nonsense,
- the modem dials the phone number, you hear the famous screechy noises, and
- finally a message like:
-
- CONNECT 2400
-
- appears on your screen. This means that your modem has successfully
- connected to another modem at a rate of approximately 24 dollars per
- second. The number will be higher (9600, etc.) depending on how much
- your modem cost. Advertisers will tell you that this number is a speed
- measurement, but don't believe them! In fact, all modems operate
- at the same speed, but the manufacturers of course want you to buy the
- modems with the higher connection charges.
-
- Once you are connected, you are ready to access vast databases of
- information, make plane reservations, communicate with people around the
- globe, and be incredibly productive. Ha! Who are you kidding? You'll
- probably spend all your time playing "Bunny Blaster Wars" on the local BBS.
-
- By the way, if you are in need of telecommunications software,
- you might want to check out BLAZETERM, made by the same company who brought
- you BLAZEMONGER (see the April 1993 WeirdBench, if you dare). BLAZETERM is
- the ULTIMATE telecomm program, especially for ease of use. Its built-in
- phone database already has every BBS number in the world stored, so you
- don't need to type them in yourself. In fact, you don't need to type
- ANYTHING at all, because BLAZETERM already KNOWS what you want to find out
- and does the typing FOR you! Heck, you don't even need a modem! Or even
- an Amiga!! Just toss BLAZETERM into your desk drawer and leave it alone
- while it does all your work! Better yet, you simply can send BLAZEMONGER
- INCORPORATED a bunch of money, and you can forget about the program
- altogether. What could be easier?
-
- I hope you've enjoyed our little tour! Until next time, remember
- these famous words spoken by the inventor of the modem: "Eeeeeeeeeeeeee
- KKSSSSSSHHHH!" I think there is wisdom in there for all of us.
-