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- Path: sparky!uunet!mcsun!uknet!icdoc!cc.ic.ac.uk!carrion.cc.ic.ac.uk!vulture
- From: vulture@carrion.cc.ic.ac.uk (Thomas Sippel - Dau)
- Newsgroups: comp.dcom.modems
- Subject: Re: Serial and Parallel interface ??????
- Message-ID: <1992Jul21.204021.28899@cc.ic.ac.uk>
- Date: 21 Jul 92 19:40:21 GMT
- References: <1992Jul18.171603.14409@mksol.dseg.ti.com> <1992Jul19.104938.9998@raven.alaska.edu> <3616@randvax.rand.org> <1992Jul20.002903.11008@raven.alaska.edu>
- Reply-To: cmaae47@cc.ic.ac.uk
- Organization: Imperial College of Science, Technology and Medicine
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- In article <1992Jul20.002903.11008@raven.alaska.edu>, floyd@hayes.ims.alaska.edu (Floyd Davidson) writes:
- -- The original reason that computer modems were virtually all serial
- -- devices as opposed to parallel devices probably has to do with the
- -- fact that there were "standard" serial ports on most computers,
- -- and there still isn't a standard bi-directional parallel port on
- -- many systems.
-
- The actual reason is that V.24 (aka EIA RS323C with only slight differences)
- has actually been designed for "modems". The idea was that the telco would
- give (or rather ransom) it to people, who then had a fully defined (and
- incidentally quite well designed) standard interface in which to plug all
- kinds of equipment. The connection was to be a simple, pin-for-pin straight
- through connected cable.
-
- Missing from V.24 was dialling support, and a rigid set of minimum
- implementation requirements - the kind of common command and interpretation
- set that made the SCSI standard so successful 20 years later.
-
- As such V.24 has totally failed, and the telcos then went on to design their
- own plug and play interface - the modular plugs, all sort of the same but
- quite different.
-
- It was only later that (micro-) computer manufacturers defined their own
- "RS232 compatible" ports, which rapidly made building a serial cable a new
- kind of black art. But serial ports are now electrically and mechanically
- at the end of their useful life, sort of the equivalent of a start-up
- crank for a car.
-
- Thomas
-
- --
- *** This is the operative statement, all previous statements are inoperative.
- * email: cmaae47 @ cc.ic.ac.uk (Thomas Sippel - Dau) (uk.ac.ic.cc on Janet)
- * voice: +44 715 895 111 x4937 or 4934 (day), or +44 718 239 497 (fax)
- * snail: Imperial College Center for Computing Services, Kensington SW7 2BX
-