[Coco] CoCo Wireless RS-232 Pak

Gene Heskett gene.heskett at verizon.net
Wed Feb 25 15:25:01 EST 2009


On Wednesday 25 February 2009, Roger Taylor wrote:
>At 09:29 AM 2/25/2009, you wrote:
>>On Wednesday 25 February 2009, jdaggett at gate.net wrote:
>> >Gene
>> >
>> >A class 1 USB dongle is good for in excess of 100 meters. Other classes
>> >are less. There are cases where a class 1 bluetooth device has been used
>> >up to 600 feet.
>> >
>> >james
>>
>>I wonder how many channels it could handle?  I have a serial mouse on a
>>piggy-backed rs-232 Deluxe & if I remove that, I'll lose my mouse.  So I
>> had a bluetooth mouse in mind to replace it.  Which means the BT receiver
>> will be getting data from more than one transmitter...  What about
>> collisions? Roger?
>>
>>I'd assume there are src id's in the packets the BT device sends/receives.
>>Roger?
>
>Your PC's bluetooth stack/driver should handle multiple connections
>just fine, even from multiple CoCos.
>
>You can rename your CoCo's broadcasted name, but each pak should have
>it's own address on top of that so there's no mix-ups.
>
>Each pak is customizable.  When the pak is in command mode (the PC
>hasn't connected to it yet) (like a modem accepting AT commands), you
>can set parameters that stay there until you change them again.
>
>Two DECB, OS-9, or NitrOS-9 CoCo's should be able to talk to each
>other using the pak's EasyConnect mode which is initiated by both
>CoCos using a certain command sequence.  A cable-replacement mode is
>started and the rest is just an invisible null-modem serial cable as
>far as the CoCo is concerned.

That doesn't seem to address using a BT mouse with the coco though?

-- 
Cheers, Gene
"There are four boxes to be used in defense of liberty:
 soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Please use in that order."
-Ed Howdershelt (Author)
"Mind if I smoke?"
	"I don't care if you burst into flames and die!"



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