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C-MODEM

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

C-Modem[1] is a protocol driver developed by Lavio Pareschi (Rio de Janeiro) in 1989 that functions similarly to ZMODEM.[citation needed]

Features

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C-Modem has a crash recovery feature. If a transmission is interrupted, the partially received file is saved with the extension .BAD. Upon reconnection, the transmission resumes.

The protocol dynamically adjusts the size of data blocks between cyclic redundancy checks based on transmission speed and error rates. Block sizes can range from 32 to 4096 bytes. C-Modem also supports full duplex communication.

References

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  1. ^ Driscoll, Kevin (April 19, 2022), "Recalling the Modem World", The Modem World, Yale University Press, pp. 1–28, doi:10.2307/j.ctv2c3k1ww.3, ISBN 9780300248142, JSTOR j.ctv2c3k1ww.3
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