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Hacking the Actiontec 56k Modem/Gateway

william_lorenz writes "The Actiontec Dual 56k External Modem is an inexpensive device with a built-in 56k modem and two Ethernet ports that can be used as an Internet gateway of sorts. What's great about it is that it runs some form of uClinux, it's easily hackable, and Greg Boehnlein of the Linux Users Group of Cleveland and NOOSS fame recently contributed a detailed report on his findings! Pictures of the board are also available here, here, and here. Lots of specific details are included in Greg's article, and there's been some further discussions about this on the LUGC mailing lists."

6 of 233 comments (clear)

  1. Let the comments begin! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Jeez...

    Slashdotted already.. this article's gonna set the record for redundant posts.

    Yes, we KNOW his server MUST be behind that 56k modem.

    Right, now that we've got that out of the way...

  2. Hmm... other products by Empiric · · Score: 5, Funny

    Personally, I'm more intrigued by the company's anti-kidnapping technology. I'll sleep easier once that's out of the way.

    --
    ~ Whence do you come, slayer of men, or where are you going, conqueror of space?
  3. Re:56k gateways by mackstann · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Two ethernet ports + linux + easily hackable = who cares about the modem jack?

  4. They say it's hackable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    "it's easily hackable"

    If only we could hack it into a 256k modem...

    1. Re:They say it's hackable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      It's not really the FCC's fault. They imposed the limitation due to the potential for crosstalk due to the nature of the lines themselves. That said, specifying it in bits/second was a dumb way to go about it (and no doubt suggested by the telcos) -- at least, I think that's how the rule is written. So, back in the days when switching was still physical, it would be likely that, were everyone using these hypothetical 256k modems, you wouldn't be connecting near the full speed due to all the interference, and voice service would be degraded for everyone.

      But in any case, *since* the regulation was put in place, this allowed the telcos to move to digital switching, since they could know the limit of the signals they'd have to digitize to support all legal users/devices on their circuits. You have to admit, it would've been hard for them to carry on any other way -- Imagine if they still had to support racks of relays just to ensure your attempt to run ethernet-over-phoneline would work. Now imagine if they had to try to support that for *long distance* calling...

      Now, DSL is a little different. For one thing, it terminates at the telco's central office racks, or a 'remote terminal' (basically a central-office-in-a-box that connects back to the main office over fiber or some extreme-speed-over-copper solution), so the telco only has to support line quality over a limited, known distance. For another, it takes advantage of technological advancements to run up in relatively high, definitely inaudible frequencies*, so there's little risk of corruption to others' voice service... and further, the hardware is, in fact, advanced enough to pick from any of a number of 'channels,' such that, while it's still only a point-to-point tech, it can avoid crosstalk from your neighbor's link by running on completely different frequencies. Practically speaking, it *is* the best thing telcos can bring you right now over existing copper && at a vaguely affordable price && while being profitable enough for them to continue deploying it.

      Now, in exchange for this non-switchability (you aren't "making calls" with DSL, it's basically like having a big fault-tolerant null-modem cable between you and the terminating equipment), the telcos are supposed to open up their racks at reasonable cost so other ISPs can come in and give you a choice of whose service you're plugged into. Yes, this part has been getting a bit screwed up, but that's a political issue; it's hard to imagine it working another way technologically... unless they'd done something like electricity 'deregulation,' and set it up so you'd *always* be using the telco's equipment, backbone, netblock, etc., and choosing which ISP to pay the equivalent of your 'generation charge' to. If you think about it for a moment, you'll realize that'd work roughly as "well" for telecom as it has for electricity, so perhaps it's a good thing they didn't try it that way.

      So the real question is not, "Why do we have to buy DSL instead of 256K modems?," it's "Why do we still bother with 'voice' circuits at all, when everything could be 100% digital and routable, with Vonage-style boxes at the NID of the homes?"
      It's 2003, and it'd make the most sense for the telcos to become 'data utilities,' in competition with cable, wireless, and third-party fiber-stringers... ...but we're still in a transition period, and since the telcos *will* leap like rabid weasels to price-fix and destroy competition if they're let off their leashes, it's not clear what we can do. The same regulations that *allow* competition for DSL (forcing 'open racks') make it unattractive for the telcos to offer DSL without the underlying, obsolete voice circuit - because then the ILEC wouldn't be getting their cut (or at least, as big of one) if you opted for a CLEC's service.

      Meanwhile, of course, cable is practically unregulated, so you get your local monopoly with that, and absolutely no ISP choice (which would be technically 'expensive' anyway, giv

  5. possible to hack cable/adsl routers? by narkotix · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Would it be possible to hack an adsl/cable router to be used as a simple webserver? For a low traffic and static site it would be perfect for my business website hosting needs. 10watts consumption...fanless operation...and small footprint it sounds like a dream! I could even imagine other hacks like interfacing a larger amount of flash storage or running a real low end db &scripting engine to have behaviour like mysql/php3 together.

    --
    We played dungeons and dragons for 3 hours.....then i was slain by an elf