We are trying to program through the Rmx port on a hicom 300e. We hit ctrl t to get the > prompt, but cannot get any commands to work ...such as dis-scsu. We hit return and the screen does nothing. Any help would be appreciated
Hi,
What is the 'RMX Port'
How are you connecting ?
As far as I remember it can be either via the V24/RS232/Serial port on the dongle on front
Or via Atlantic LAN
Use 192.0.2.100 on laptop
connect to 192.0.2.3 using ComWin or Comtes
You will have problems using Hyperterminal but you should at least get a line of #### if you connect and the CTRL T should work
We are connecting using Procomm with tvi910. We get the line of ###### when we connect, use CTRL T and the > comes up. We type is dis-shsu and press return. The curser moves to in front of the > prompt and blinks. Nothing else happens
Actually type in dis-scsu at the < prompt and the curser moves to in front. We have tried other commands also, but no response comes up. Verified the keyboard is tvi910 also.
Thanks, I'll look into it. We normally use LC-WIN but are having a UNIX problem at this time, so that was a no-go.
That's why we were having to do a direct connect to the PBX.
Assuming you are using Procomm, which you should be, there is a 3.5" diskette that comes with your system DAT tapes that has a TVI910.kbd special keyboard layout file on it and also a pansi3.kbd layout file on it. You need to copy those 2 files into the directory where your other .kbd files are, overwriting if necessary. Then you need to go into your TVI910 profile and for the assigned key layout you need to specify the tvi910.kbd file from Siemens. The same goes for the ANSI-BBS protocol you would use with the the regular unix login - you need to assign the pansi3.kbd file to that. That will allow you to press the function keys and stuff that the template requires to navigate around.
Don Bruechert, Voice Comm Analyst II
CareTech Solutions @ Holy Family Memorial
Manitowoc, WI, USA
I started with a big orange beast in 93, then added on 9006.2 in 96, got rid of the beast and added 9006.3 in 97 and continued through 9006.6. Added a Hicom 150 Pro in 1999 using a Y2K excuse to replace an AT&T System 75, and my first 4000 was a V5 in 2010 that replaced the 150 and allowed me to get the platform's "foot in the door", knowing I would be soon replacing it all. In 2014 we replaced all the 9006 stuff, and the V5 with 4000 hardware and V7. All of the formal training I have had was a 9006 EMML/MAC class in 1996 and now I'm taking the North American Service Track for the 4000 with one class left to go. Everything else came from the SOHK - I have been fully self maintaining (except for upgrades, and the first couple of HD replacements) since 1997, but I did pressure them into a parts and "remote maintenance" contract when we did the upgrade partially because I got them to include a crash kit of critical spares on-site, and also because I'm sick of being the Lone Ranger and flying without a net - especially when I try to take vacation!!
Don Bruechert, Voice Comm Analyst II
CareTech Solutions @ Holy Family Memorial
Manitowoc, WI, USA
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