Mr. Wizard
Member
Registered: Oct 1999
Location: Seattle, WA USA
Posts: 15 |
Julie,
Have you tried connecting an external modem to that COM port? That at least would tell you if the COM port setting is valid. Use Hyperterminal to open up a modem session and use the AT command set to validate that you can talk to the modem.
Similar situation: I had a user with NT Workstation 4.0 trying to connect via null-modem to a Cisco hub. He tried everything and what it came down to was NT had created a device for COM2 when the actual physical connector was setup as COM1.
In order to fix it, I checked the COM port settings in the BIOS, deleted the COM2 port in Control Panel | Ports, and then restarted NT. After the reboot, I looked in Control Panel | Ports and COM1 was now active. I changed the speed settings to 19200 and it worked fine.
I've got a laptop, different model, and have had no problems with the serial cradle for the Visor.
First thing to check is make sure the port is what you think it is and that you can access the modem or other device using it.
Mark
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