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- Newsgroups: comp.sys.palmtops
- Path: sparky!uunet!elroy.jpl.nasa.gov!usc!sol.ctr.columbia.edu!src.honeywell.com!kanefsky
- From: kanefsky@src.honeywell.com (Steve Kanefsky)
- Subject: Re: Dynalink or Solectek for 95LX?
- Message-ID: <1992Jul27.152925.26669@src.honeywell.com>
- Sender: news@src.honeywell.com (News interface)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: troi.src.honeywell.com
- Organization: Honeywell Systems & Research Center
- References: <1992Jul25.171853.7660@sctc.com>
- Date: Mon, 27 Jul 1992 15:29:25 GMT
- Lines: 93
-
- In article <1992Jul25.171853.7660@sctc.com> boebert@sctc.com (Earl Boebert) writes:
- >Well, I went looking at the HP95LXs today; target application is
- >reading mail and news while on the road. The salesdroid was what
- >you would expect, so naturally I have a few questions:
- >
- >1: I gather that the cable sequence is HP <-> DB9 through the adapter
- >cable, then DB9 <-> RS232 through the cable from the connectivity pack.
- >Is this right?
-
- The connectivity pack comes with a serial cable and one adaptor. The
- serial cable has the 4-pin HP connector on one end and a female DB-9 on
- the other end. The cable is wired with a "null modem" built in, meaning
- that the transmit and receive pins on one end are swapped with respect to
- the other end, so that you can connect one computer to another directly.
- The female DB-9 fits the serial port on most PC compatibles. The adaptor
- is a simple DB-9 male to DB-25 female adaptor, which should fit any PC
- compatibles which don't have a 9-pin serial port. Note that neither the
- cable by itself nor the cable with the adaptor will work with a modem.
- There is a separate serial adaptor kit which contains two other DB-9 to
- DB-25 adaptors. Both end in male DB-25's, but one of them swaps transmit
- and receive pins and the other doesn't. The one which does swap the pins
- (cancelling out the swap that the cable itself does) will work with a
- modem, and the other one will work with printers and computers with a
- female DB-25 serial port. So, if you buy the connectivity pack and the
- serial adaptor kit, you'll have a serial cable and three adaptors that fit
- just about anything. The neat thing is that each of the adaptors has a
- little icon molded into it (computer, telephone, printer) which lets you
- easily distinguish one from another. One other neat thing is that,
- although you can get equivalent adaptors elsewhere, these adaptors are
- more compact and the thumbscrews on the serial cable attach the cable
- securely to the adaptor. Most other adaptors I've seen don't mate
- properly with the HP cable (i.e. the connectors fit together but the
- thumbscrews can't be used to secure the connection).
-
-
- >2: The store carried two pocket modems: the Dynalink DS92P and Solectek.
- >Anybody every use one of these with an HP95?
-
- I haven't used either of these two modems, but let me put in a plug for
- the Telebit QBlazer. I just received one about a week ago, and it's a
- fantastic little modem (I'll post a full review of it soon). This is a
- 9600 baud modem with V.42, V.42bis, and MNP 2-5. The modem is cube
- shaped, with the actual dimensions being 2.3" x 2.4" x 2.4" and is priced
- at only $299 (the original list price was $749, which dropped to $599, and
- the best discount price was around $435 until Telebit announced their big
- promotion just a few weeks ago). The QBlazer even has the same black
- color as the 95LX and is a perfect match for it. It runs on AC power or
- on a 9V battery and has absolutely no trouble running on battery power
- with the 95LX. It uses a mini 9-pin DIN connector instead of a DB-25,
- which is both a curse and a blessing. If you're not afraid to take two
- cables, cut the ends off, and wire up a custom cable you can make a
- beautiful cable of exactly the length you want between the 95LX and the
- QBlazer, with no bulky connectors to get in the way. On the other hand,
- if you must use off the shelf components, you'll end up with a rather
- bulky cable. The QBlazer comes with a DIN-9 to DB-9 cable, but you'll
- need a gender changer *and* a null modem to join that to the HP connector.
- You could buy 9-pin adaptors to accomplish this at Radio Shack, or you
- could use the HP adaptors which would require stepping up from 9 to 25 and
- then back down to 9. In either case, your cable would end up being
- bulkier than your modem!
-
-
- >3: Is the built in com function a terminal emulator or will I have to
- >run something like Procomm as an application? If so, do I have to
- >spring for a data card?
-
- The built-in comm program has VT100 and ANSI terminal emulation
- capabilities, and XModem and Kermit transfer protocols built-in, so you
- don't need to use Procomm. I've had a terrible time getting any decent
- transfer rates with the built-in comm program, so I've switched to a
- *much* better shareware comm program called "Commo." There is a version
- of commo written especially for the 95LX, and it is far superior to the
- built-in comm program in every way, especially the scripting language and
- file-transfer capabilities. It's also very compact (the executable is
- only 31K on my disk when PKLITE-ed). The scripting capabilities of Commo
- are so wonderful that there are a number of other shareware programs that
- use Commo to do automated message handling on CompuServe, etc. without you
- even knowing how to use Commo. I use one of these, called "Message" to
- download the hundreds of messages in the 95LX newsgroups from CompuServe
- each day in just a minute or two of connect time.
-
-
- >4: Is $579 for a 1 meg 95 a high/low/medium price?
-
- That's about the lowest price I've seen for it.
-
- Hope this helps,
-
- --
- Steve Kanefsky
-
-
-
-