Alex wrote:
> Hey thanks a lot for the help, under Communications there is none detected
> sooo..
Do you see where on the computer the phone line plugs into an RJ-11
modem connector ?
This is a picture of a computer with a modem card present. The card
could have one or two connectors on it. (In the picture, the red outline
is drawn around the modem card faceplate.) The card has two connectors,
as that card allows connecting the phone to the end of the line via
one connector, and the connection to the wall is via the other connector.
http://i120.photobucket.com/albums/o195/aonfocaleile/pcicard.jpg
If the thing looks like that, then the card is likely on the PCI bus.
Another form factor, is the audio modem riser slot, but I don't think
your motherboard has one of those.
In this photo, the short brown slot in the middle of the photo is an AMR slot.
It uses motherboard audio for the interface for the modem as far as I know.
http://www.maximopc.org/images/articulos/5/agppro.jpg
There is an example of an AMR card that plugs into that slot here.
http://www.abouterp.com/erpsystemswordsa/images/AMR.jpg
I don't know how an AMR is registered in the system, and
what you'd see in Device Manager for that.
Other means of connecting modems, are via external modems,
I have a USR external, and it connects via 9 pin RS232 cable,
to the back of the computer. Basically, that modem is connected
to a serial port. If my modem was switched off (which it is
right now), there is no way to detect it. My system remembers
that such a modem was connected though, so it is not completely
forgotten.
(Modem that connects to serial port.)
http://content.etilize.com/300/10005730.jpg
A modem can also be connected via a USB cable, and that would be
an external unit as well.
*******
OK, so you can use your eyes, and take a guess as to what kind of
modem you think it is. If the modem is "external" to the computer,
that should be easy to figure out. If the modem is internal to the
computer, it could be AMR or PCI based. For PCI, download and install
this.
Everest Free Edition (from Lavalys)
http://majorgeeks.com/download4181.html
Install it, and then run the tool. Go to Devices
![Stick Out Tongue :P :P](https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/joypixels/assets/8.0/png/unicode/64/1f61b.png)
CI Devices and
look through the list. Is there a modem shown there ? Are
there any items that say "NoDB". Things like that are not
recognized by the program, so it can't give a nice text
name to the product it sees. If your hardware is old enough,
the program should get most of it. Lavalys charges for their
latest software, so that version is the last completely free
version.
I don't hold out much hope of identifying the thing with a program,
so if you get bored with this approach, take the cover off the machine
and have a closer look at where that RJ-11 connector goes.
If the modem is an external device, and it is not longer connected,
that'll make it pretty hard to detect
Paul