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- 02-26-2004, 04:31 AM #1TymGuest
Looking for some guidance here please...
Does the GSM modem in an Ericsson R520m support v42bis data
compression?
I ask 'casue my Nokia 6310i doesn't and I need a GSM modem which
does, and so am looking at an R520M to replace it with.
Any advice welcome please
Tym
› See More: R520M GSM Modem
- 02-26-2004, 06:36 AM #2dummyGuest
Re: R520M GSM Modem
The ER520 manual says
"Data Transmission, upto 28.8 on networks supporting HCSD
With V42bis compression you can reach data transmission rates upto
4 times higher dependent on the data type and network.
Fax upto 9.6 kb/s, Group 3 class 1 or 2, class 2 is recommended"
The erir520.inf file for windows shows this
HKR, Settings, Compression_Off,, "+DS=0;"
HKR, Settings, Compression_On,, "+DS=3,0,2048,32;"
so it seems that it can, however I do not know if this is supported purely
when used in windows, or whether the phone can use it itself if you
are performing email or wap direct from the phone without using the
phone as a modem for another device.
T.
you can see the 520 manual at
http://www.sonyericsson.com/download...EN_Default.pdf
- 02-26-2004, 06:24 PM #3matt weberGuest
Re: R520M GSM Modem
On Thu, 26 Feb 2004 10:31:07 GMT, [email protected] (Tym) wrote:
>Looking for some guidance here please...
>
>Does the GSM modem in an Ericsson R520m support v42bis data
>compression?
>
>I ask 'casue my Nokia 6310i doesn't and I need a GSM modem which
>does, and so am looking at an R520M to replace it with.
>
>Any advice welcome please
>
>
>Tym
Not likely, because what you get with GSM isn't really a modem.
Modem implies modulation/demodulation scheme, and that isn't what
happens. On a GSM phone used for data, the data payload replaces the
voice payload, so there is no analog transmission within the GSM
network. Depending upon how it is done, you either get 9600 bps or
14,400 bps payload per time slot.
the phone tries to be blind to the actual protocol, is simply the
physical layer of the connection.
- 02-28-2004, 05:55 AM #4TymGuest
Re: R520M GSM Modem
On Thu, 26 Feb 2004 17:24:33 -0700, matt weber <[email protected]>
wrote:
>Not likely, because what you get with GSM isn't really a modem.
>Modem implies modulation/demodulation scheme, and that isn't what
>happens. On a GSM phone used for data, the data payload replaces the
>voice payload, so there is no analog transmission within the GSM
>network. Depending upon how it is done, you either get 9600 bps or
>14,400 bps payload per time slot.
>
>the phone tries to be blind to the actual protocol, is simply the
>physical layer of the connection.
I appreciate the feedback, but think it's flawed.
I say this , because on my desk, in front of me, I have a blue box,
which is a GSM modem - no phone. This works perfectly as a normal
modem and supports v42bis data compression.
This is made by ECL, but there others out there, and there is one
which uses the sony ericsson chipset too...
- 03-01-2004, 01:03 PM #5dummyGuest
Re: R520M GSM Modem
"Tym" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> On Thu, 26 Feb 2004 17:24:33 -0700, matt weber <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
> >Not likely, because what you get with GSM isn't really a modem.
> >Modem implies modulation/demodulation scheme, and that isn't what
> >happens. On a GSM phone used for data, the data payload replaces the
> >voice payload, so there is no analog transmission within the GSM
> >network. Depending upon how it is done, you either get 9600 bps or
> >14,400 bps payload per time slot.
> >
> >the phone tries to be blind to the actual protocol, is simply the
> >physical layer of the connection.
>
> I appreciate the feedback, but think it's flawed.
>
> I say this , because on my desk, in front of me, I have a blue box,
> which is a GSM modem - no phone. This works perfectly as a normal
> modem and supports v42bis data compression.
>
> This is made by ECL, but there others out there, and there is one
> which uses the sony ericsson chipset too...
>
>
I agree,
Data compression consists of removing redundant repetitive characters
or using a different bitstring for common sequences etc etc, and then
transmitting it as 0's and 1's, the transmission medium does not matter
at this point, so I still say the phone can do it, I just don't know if it
will
do it itself, for example, when retrieving pop mail, wap browsing.
However, I suspect it cannot be used if you configure the connection for
ISDN
rather than standard dsm data, the ISDN modem at the other end will have
to understand compression too, and I think they are vanishingly small..
Regards,
T.
- 03-02-2004, 05:45 AM #6TymGuest
Re: R520M GSM Modem
On Mon, 1 Mar 2004 19:03:04 +0000 (UTC), "dummy" <[email protected]>
wrote:
> Data compression consists of removing redundant repetitive characters
>or using a different bitstring for common sequences etc etc, and then
>transmitting it as 0's and 1's, the transmission medium does not matter
>at this point, so I still say the phone can do it, I just don't know if it
>will
>do it itself, for example, when retrieving pop mail, wap browsing.
>However, I suspect it cannot be used if you configure the connection for
>ISDN
>rather than standard dsm data, the ISDN modem at the other end will have
>to understand compression too, and I think they are vanishingly small..
It's a standard dial in connection, not ISDN.
The problem I have is that having read the Ericsson info and the info
on ny Nokia 6310, the Nokia should do it too - but it doesn't
Switching on compression reporting (AT+DR=1 I think) reports +CD: NONE
when connecting to the remote device
Need to investigate the correct string to switch compression on..
OH - BTW just to confuse the issue, its a 2400,7,n connection too.
+IFC = 5,1 needs setting too
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