Did you try removing the /dev/ttyS3 device and then re-adding it? I also tend to use Debian's pon, poff, and pppconfig tool for modem connections, did you try using that with Ubuntu? Jeff Rasmussen On 10/24/05, Jeff Nelson <stutterstutt at comcast.net> wrote: > > Jeff Rasmussen wrote: > > > > http://jrasmussen0.blogspot.com/2004/07/creating-serial-port-for-internal.html > > ... > > On 10/24/05, *Jeff Nelson* <stutterstutt at comcast.net > <mailto:stutterstutt at comcast.net>> wrote: > > > I've tried using Knoppix -- it doesn't even find the PCI device. > > > I tried Knoppix again for grins, and this time it found the PCI device > and the directions in Rasmussen's blog worked just as advertised! > > Encouraged by this, I upgraded to the Ubuntu "Breezy" distro; it still > failed. Ubunto insists on calling the device ttyS14. I used setserial to > configure ttyS14, ttyS4 and even ttyS3, each time getting nowhere: > wvdialconf says it can't find a modem. > > I was really hoping to use Ubuntu because I'm setting up this system for > a computer novice for email and web surfing and it's one of the more > user-friendy distros out there. I suppose now I've got to change plans. > > -Jeff > -- Jeff Rasmussen GPG public key 0x9686C12F -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://shadowknight.real-time.com/pipermail/tclug-list/attachments/20051026/6e994e25/attachment.htm