Richard G. Roberto writes: > This was supposed to be as generally useful to as many people as > possible.
Yes. And the most generally useful thing to do for the most people is to make it easy for them to get a single connection working so that they can email for help and ftp files. > It was originally suppose to support slip and diald as well, but I never > had the chance to get that part developed. I see no urgent need to add slip support. Diald may become obsolete when demand-dialing is debugged, but I think it should have its own config utility anyway. > Of course, John may be more comfortable with these elements and add them. I intend to add demand-dialling support, but probably not using diald. > ...my users have dialup accounts for home, work, market data, and even > sometimes private shopping networks. They currently do this on win95 > themselves (multiple connections support is built in). Multiple connections aren't hard. Seperate providers for each user isn't hard either with 2.3.1. > It wouldn't require taking over dunc to create a new tool with a more > limited objective. I don't think that's what John's after though. I have multiple objectives, the first of which is to produce a tool that will allow new Debian users to get on the net without baffling themselves with the ppp-HOWTO. At the moment I am just trying to add enough flexibility to dunc to get it to generate scripts that will work with my isp. -- John Hasler [EMAIL PROTECTED] (John Hasler) Dancing Horse Hill Elmwood, WI -- TO UNSUBSCRIBE FROM THIS MAILING LIST: e-mail the word "unsubscribe" to [EMAIL PROTECTED] . Trouble? e-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] .