I'm trying to get a legacy app called 'PcScribe' (designed for Win3.1) to run on Linux. PcScribe is a program used to control a special ISA card that produces TV graphics for low-end TV stations and other video proffessionals. I can run PcScribe through Wine, but when it starts up, PcScribe displays an error message because it can't find/access a special dongle that is supposed to be attached to the parallel port to provide timing signals. I don't believe that the dongle-timer can be accessed through a device like /dev/lp0, because the dongle allows a parallel device to be plugged into it to avoid hogging the parallel port. PCScribe does have an INI file through which I can tell it the IRQ of the ISA card, but doesn't seem to have a way to tell it how to access the dongle (most PCs only have 1 parallel port, so it probably wasn't programmed with it). Is there a standard windows library for accessing a parallel port dongle? If yes, how can I make it work in Wine? Wine can redirect M$ ports like COM1 to UNIX devices like /dev/ttyS0, can this be done in this case for the parallel port dongle? -- __________________________________________________________ Sign-up for your own personalized E-mail at Mail.com http://www.mail.com/?sr=signup CareerBuilder.com has over 400,000 jobs. Be smarter about your job search http://corp.mail.com/careers _______________________________________________ wine-users mailing list wine-users@winehq.com http://www.winehq.com/mailman/listinfo/wine-users