About ASCII
ASCII stands for American Standard Code for Information Interchange. Some
TTYs and all computers in the United States and Canada use ASCII. If your
TTY has ASCII, you may need to change some options. To connect a Superprint
Pro80 to a computer, the other person should have the computer set to use
300 baud, half duplex, 8N1 parity and CR.
ASCII (ORIGINATE/ANSWER)
Determines which machine is calling and which one is answering. This usually
happens automatically. However, if you are manually setting up ASCII, select
ORIGINATE if you are going to be the person placing the call and select
ANSWER if you are going to be receiving ASCII calls.
Baud Rate (110/300)
Determines how fast the signals travel through the phone lines. You can
choose 110 or 300 baud, but 110 is rarely used.
Duplex (HALF/FULL)
Controls how characters are displayed. If you get double characters (lliikkee
tthhiiss) or none at all, change the option between half duplex and full
duplex.
Parity (8N1/7E1)
Controls error-checking. You can choose 8N1 or 7E1. The first number is
data bits. The middle letter means: "N" for No parity or "E" for Even parity.
The last number is stop bits.
Return Sequence (CR/CR + LF)
Determines what the TTY sends when you press the key. You can choose CR
or CR + LF. CR stands for "carriage return" and CR + LF stands for "carriage
return plus line feed." A carriage return goes to the beginning of the
current line. A carriage return plus a line feed goes to the beginning
of the next line.
ASCII Seek Time (3)
Sets the length of time during which the TTY sends out an ASCII seek tone.
The normal TTY seek time is 3 seconds. You may need more time if you often
connect to computers. Six seconds is recommended. Selecting 0 turns off
ASCII code and your TTY will not try to use it even if the other TTY is
using ASCII.
|