Slashdot Mirror


The Linux Modem Problem?

muonman asks: "There is a business in town which refurbishes old computers and distributes them to kids, roughly at cost. Part of this cost is a $5 license for Windows 98 (they do use OpenOffice, tho). I have outlined to them the benefits of migrating to Linux, but the showstopper is modems, which most of their customers require. They buy in bulk at $4 each, with unpredictable chipsets. I can find reliable(?) drivers for Smartlinks, but cant buy them for less than $6 each, and I hate to recommend the switch in suppliers without more info. I haven't had luck getting license info from linuxant for using Conexants. It seems there has been no activity on the linmodem front for some time. Any wisdom from the Slashdot crowd?"

1 of 106 comments (clear)

  1. Contact the modem manufactures for donations by joelparker · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Have you asked the modem manufacturers to give it to you for free?

    This is often possible for software when there's good public relations and/or a tax-writeoff.