At 05:04 AM 04/13/2003 +0100, Peter Fairbrother wrote:
I got a request from a (US) psychiatrist that m-o-o-t (m-o-o-t is a CD that boots on your computer, and does secure things) should include an implementation of VOIP, to allow his patients to securely connect to his server. I think they are mostly servicemen or spies, but so what.
It's actually easy to do a version that will do that, and if you're listening, I'll do it soon, and for free to you only :) - but m-o-o-t is based on OpenBSD, and isn't that good at modems. Linux isn't that good either...
I don't know about OpenBSD, but supposedly Linux is getting better at handling Winmodems, at least for the most common chipsets. You might want to check with Perry Metzger, one of the founders of Wasabisystems.com, which is a company that ports NetBSD to things; perhaps they've got better driver sets than the OpenBSD folks. Also, in addition to looking at openh323.org, you should probably check out Speak Freely. http://speakfreely.org/ has the 7.2 version, and John Walker recently prereleased some 7.6 versions at http://www.fourmilab.ch/speakfree/windows/download/ and maybe http://web.tiscali.it/vitez/picophone.html
I'd like to suggest that those who don't provide details of their modems' functionality (which is the main problem) should be boycotted. Or killed. Similar applies to all hardware.
Too late for that, and some of them have reproduced already so you won't even be keeping them out of the gene pool...