Path: utzoo!utgpu!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!mailrus!ames!pasteur!ucbvax!AI.AI.MIT.EDU!BARTH From: BARTH@AI.AI.MIT.EDU (Richard Barth) Newsgroups: comp.dcom.modems Subject: INFO-MODEMS Digest v89 #33 Message-ID: <527706.890127.BARTH@AI.AI.MIT.EDU> Date: 28 Jan 89 04:22:08 GMT Sender: daemon@ucbvax.BERKELEY.EDU Organization: The Internet Lines: 34 In Info-MODEMS DIGEST V89 #33, Omer Zak writes: ... [stuff omitted] But... there is a tiny problem. To be actually able to communicate at 300 baud, your terminal program must usually be appropriately configured, and likewise the modem. Some modems can be configured solely by software (AT commands), but others need switches to be pressed in order to go down from 38400 baud or so to lowly 300 baud. [more stuff omitted] So... please be and continue to be accessible to deaf persons via phone by: 1. Making sure that your modem has also the ability to support the Bell 103 standard. As a related matter, there is an increasingly common tendency of SYSOPS running whiz-bang modems at gawdamitey baud rates to _deliberately_prevent_ access to their systems at 300 baud. For some speed demons, even 1200 is too slow and callers at that rate, too, are told to get lost. While it is probably too much to expect all BBS operators to make their boards accessible to TDDs using Baudot code and Weitbrecht modems (yes, it's possible - my board has done it for years) it is certainly reasonable, as Omer notes, to let 300-baud callers read the mail. Whether you want to let them download or upload at this slow a rate is another question. But as Omer points out, there is a continuing effort on the part of the computer oriented members of the deaf community to induce their Baudot buddies to try ASCII and the email it makes possible. It is not helpful to have them try it, and then to find out that many boards won't let them on..