On Jul 02 18:25, 1997, William Bowen of 1:353/385 wrote:
RC>> Yes, indeed. I did think otherwise. :-) I saw your post as looking
RC>> for a way to improve upon the 31,200 connect - and nothing in the
RC>> init will do that. Your best bet is to use a terminal program
RC>> (Hyperterm is fine) and issue the atin series of commands, starting
RC>> with ati1. One of them may mention a manufacturer, or at least a
RC>> chipset.
WB> Great...you appear to know more than I on this topic! Thanks for the
info,
WB> and yes, I tried all the ati_ commands...it has a texas instruments chip-
WB> set. But that's all it gives me. Any other ideas?
Nope. If the information isn't displayed, and not printed anywhere on the
board, the only real chance you have is to look for an FCC ID on the board.
Then, you can contact the FCC website (I don't have the address) and, with
the ID, identify the manufacturer.
Once you've done that the information may not be of much use to you, but
there you have it.
Rick
--- MsgedSQ 3.30
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* Origin: The Warlock's Cave (1:163/215.39)
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