Good idea, tomorrow I'll open it (very gently) and see what chip it is. I couldn't find any info on the card on the internet, just a generic one I think. Cheers Justin -----Original Message----- From: Mike Harrison [mailto:mike@WHITEWING.CO.UK] Sent: Tuesday, 15 April 2003 7:40 PM To: PICLIST@MITVMA.MIT.EDU Subject: Re: [EE]: PCMCIA modem connections On Tue, 15 Apr 2003 16:23:42 +1000, you wrote: >Thanks Adam and Mike >I wonder if I can get the pinout and then talk to the card through windows >(or dos), ie send commands to it and see what it does... > >Justin Yes - if you just plug it into a PCMCIA port on Windows95/98, it will get mapped into I/O space (you can find the address in device manager), and poke at it from a DOS window. You could do it in DOS, but DOS PCMCIA drivers are all a bit of a nightmare. May also be worth ripping open a modem card - you may be able to find the datasheet of the chip they use. Or have a look for PCMCIA modem chips - they will probabaly all be pretty similar. -- http://www.piclist.com#nomail Going offline? Don't AutoReply us! email listserv@mitvma.mit.edu with SET PICList DIGEST in the body -- http://www.piclist.com#nomail Going offline? Don't AutoReply us! email listserv@mitvma.mit.edu with SET PICList DIGEST in the body