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- Cellular Telephone Experimentors Kit
-
- Copyright (C) 1994 by Network Wizards
-
- March 4, 1994
-
-
-
- DISCLAIMER
-
- The Cellular Telephone Experimentors Kit is designed for experimentation
- and testing of cellular telephones. It is not designed to be used for any
- illegal or fraudulent purposes. It is illegal to make telephone calls with
- intent to defraud the cellular service provider. It is illegal for most
- people to listen to cellular telephone calls. Be aware of these laws when
- using this kit. Check on them if you need more information. You can break
- laws by typing the wrong thing. Be careful!
-
- In no event will Network Wizards be liable for any damages, incidental
- or consequential, arising out of use or misuse of this product.
-
-
-
- DESCRIPTION
-
- The Cellular Telephone Experimentors Kit consists of an interface adapter
- and cable, and a floppy disk containing software and manual. The kit is
- designed for technicians, students, professionals, hobbyists, and others
- interested in using, learning, repairing, and experimenting with cellular
- telephone technology.
-
- A supplied program can be used to enter test modes built into the cellular
- phone for testing and repairs. Another program can be used to access the
- phones user features, and program telephone memories and NAMs by using a PC
- interface instead of awkward phone keyboard commands. A programmers
- library is supplied to allow you to write your own programs to access the
- phone in both normal operating mode and in test mode. A program is
- supplied that gives examples of writing applications for either of these
- modes. One of these programs shows how the PC can completely control the
- cellular phone, making and receiving calls while the phone is only
- operating in its test mode with the PC handling all of the cellular
- protocol and messaging functions.
-
- The software distribution also contains information files on cellular
- telephone related things, such as lists of cellular systems, and a short
- tutorial on how the cellular phone system operates.
-
-
-
- HARDWARE
-
- The cellular telephone interface adapter is enclosed in an RS-232
- connector shell. One end is a DB25 female connector wired as a DCE, for
- direct connection to a PC serial port. It uses pins 2 (rx), 3 (tx), and 7
- (ground). The other end of the adapter is an 10-pin RJ45 connector. An
- adapter cable converts this into the connector that plugs into the bottom
- of the cellular phone.
-
- A 3.5mm stereo jack on the side of the interface provides access to the
- phones audio signals. The outer ring is ground. The inner ring is audio
- into the phone, and the tip is audio coming out of the phone. The phone
- must be sent a command to use these lines instead of its internal handset.
-
- The interface contains a microcontroller and interface circuitry that
- converts the phones proprietary interface into standard RS-232 signals at
- 2400 baud. At this time we are not releasing specs on the RS-232 protocol
- used; you will need to use the supplied software and programming libaries
- to control the phone. The interface gets its power from the phone. It
- only uses a few milliamps, but should be unplugged from the phone when
- not in use. Do NOT attempt to plug the RJ45 connectors into any other
- devices (such as telephones, modems, etc).
-
-
-
- USE OF THE INTERFACE
-
- The interface should be connected to both the cellular phone and a PCs
- serial port. The software supports COM1 or COM2. The OKI must be turned
- off, as the software will power up the OKI itself.
-
-
-
- DEBUGGING INTERFACE CONNECTION PROBLEMS
-
- If the software fails to see the phone, you can check the connection with
- this technique. Run any standard terminal emulation software on the PC.
- Connect to the COM port the interface is connected to (with the OKI
- attached and powered off). Set the baud rate for 2400 baud, 8 bits, no
- parity. Now turn the phone on. You should see a string of six characters
- come back (three repeated twice). If you do not see any characters come
- back, check your connections and such until you get the problem corrected.
-
-
-
-
- USING THE SOFTWARE
-
- The distribution contains some informational files for browsing or
- searching, including:
-
- AREACODE.DOC
-
- A listing of North American area codes.
-
-
- SYSTEMS.DOC
-
- A listing of North American cellular telephone systems.
-
-
-
- There are four programs supplied for controlling the cellular phone.
- All four programs default to using the COM1 port for the interface.
- If you are using COM2, you can type the program name followed by "2"
- to use them, such as "MENU 2".
-
- MENU.EXE
-
- The MENU program can display and set NAM information, edit telephone number
- memories, set the custom power-on message, and discharge the battery. The
- MENU program uses a simple menu driven interface to access these functions.
- Menu's are navigated by using the arrow keys: up/down to select a menu
- item, right-arrow (or RETURN) to select the item, and left-arrow to go back
- up a level. ESCAPE exits the program (from the top-level only) and a few
- sub-menus.
-
- When editing telephone number memories, you must first read memories into
- the PCs buffer from either the cellular phone or a file. Then you can
- edit, sort, print, or save them (back to the phone, or to a file). We
- advise reading the memories from your phone into the buffer, and then
- saving them to a backup file before you begin playing with these functions.
- This way you will be able to recover from any mistakes you make.
-
-
- TEST.EXE
-
- TEST is a program for cellular telephone testing and maintenance. TEST
- presents a simple one screen display of the various things that can be set
- on the cellular phone. Each function is controlled by a single keypress.
- Hit ESCAPE to exit.
-
-
- NOTE: TEST MODE
- In test mode the phone just waits for commands from the interface adapter
- and executes them one at a time. The phone is not running its normal
- cellular telephone operating code. When in TEST (or DEBUG) mode, the phone
- will normally not display anything or have any LEDs on, except for a quick
- beep and LED flash when it is initially turned on.
-
-
- KEYCON.EXE, KEYCON.C
-
- KEYCON is a simple program that turns the phone on in its normal operating
- mode as a cellular phone. You can then operate the phone by pressing keys
- on the PC keyboard. KEYCON.C is the corresponding source code and shows
- how the phone is controlled in normal mode.
-
-
- TEL.EXE, TEL.C
-
- TEL is a program that turns the phone on in its built-in test mode, and
- then "simulates" being a telephone by controlling all functions from the
- PC. TEL displays messages for every function it controls on the phone,
- allowing you to understand how the cellular system operates.
-
- TEL first gets your current NAM out of the phone (you should have it set to a
- local registered NAM) and displays it along with your phones ESN. Then it
- starts monitoring the proper cellular control channel for paging messages.
- If your phone is paged for an incoming call, TEL will tell you to type R to
- receive the call. If you want to make a call, use the S command to send a
- call setup message. TEL will then enter conversation mode, set up the
- transmitter, receiver and all other functions, and monitor for and make
- handoffs to new channels.
-
- NOTE: You may not be able to hit "R" fast enough to answer the call
- before the cellular system decides you are not there. You could fix
- this by having the program automatically answer any incoming calls.
-
-
- PROGRAMMING LIBRARIES
-
- The programming library file is CTLIB.OBJ. It is fully documented in
- file CTLIB.DOC. The module and all other code were written in Borland
- Turbo C 2.0 using the small memory model, and word alignment. See the
- enclosed Makefile for compiling examples. Any programs you write need
- to include CTLIB.H, and be linked with CTLIB.OBJ, TTY.OBJ, and TTYA.OBJ.
-