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IBM's Mwave Modem news



Copied from http://www3.pc.ibm.com/support/techinfo/45e6.html

MWave Modem - Past, Present and Future

When it first shipped, the MWave Modem supported up to 14.4K data
rates. A free upgrade early in 1996 took it to 28.8K. Towards the end
of 1996, a 33.6K update was released - publicly for certain Aptiva
models and an IBM internal beta for ThinkPads. The ThinkPad upgrade
will be released to customers soon, and all current MWave systems will
likely support some form of 56kbps modem late in 1997 once the
emerging PCM-based standard is ratified.


Note: Some 56K Modems will be available before then but they will
probably be based on extensions to current V.34 technology rather than
PCM.


All this is possible because, uniquely in the Modem world, the MWave
Modem is completely software-driven. Other implementations may be
easier to configure initially, but hardwiring a Modem's logic or
burning code into EPROM makes speed-upgrading (and indeed bug fixing)
difficult if not impossible. Hybrid implementations also exist in the
marketplace (such as "WinModems"). These have some modem function -
such as the critical Data Pump - hardwired in silicon, and use the
main system processor to handle other functions such as compression
and error-correction. Although this implementation is cost-effective
and does permit upgrading/fixing the protocol functions, the maximum
data rate is fixed and there can be considerable CPU performance
degradation - 10% or more is likely. Not only that, one common
implementation today (Compaq's Lucent Modem) does not offer native
DOS, Windows NT or OS/2 support. In contact, MWave is supported on all
popular operating systems.

(snip)

Copyright 1997 IBM Corporation
last published: 1997-07-02