Serial Port Emulator Windows 10

Operating system: Windows 2000, XP, Vista (32/64), Windows 7 FREE license for 32 bit platform (x86) Virtual Serial Ports Emulator is a FREEWARE program on 32 bit platform and can be used absolutely free for any purpose. Faking an RS232 Serial Port. Movie theme ringtones free. I was able to use com0com and the Com Port Serial Emulator on Windows 7 64-bit without issue, worked great. – JWiley Oct 6 '14 at 16:53. One good option is Virtual Serial Port Emulator (VSPE) from Eterlogic It provides an.

Most new computers do not have physical serial ports so connecting hardware, like GPS devices, needs to be done using another approach. One approach is Bluetooth. When connecting my GPS device to a computer, it uses Bluetooth. Then, through software, the GPS device is exposed as a series of four virtual COM ports (two sending, two receiving). They are virtual COM ports since they don't really exist on the physical computer yet provide the same functionality of a COM port.

It is my understanding this is a fairly common approach to wirelessly connect devices. Unfortunately, when I started testing my apps on Window 10, everything depending on a virtual COM port fails. It all works on Windows 8.1.

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Free Serial Port Emulator Windows 10

The GPS device is a Garmin GLO. I've been told the RTM is limited with no support for virtual COM ports. Anything you can cite?

Virtual Serial Port Emulator Windows 10

FWIW I would be looking under Hyper-V Manager but I am already using W10 in a W8.1.2 VM so have not tried that since I do remember reading reports of problems with such a configuration--not to mention: what could I do with it and how would I control it? BTW can you describe what all we could do with this feature anyway? In W8.1.2 I see 'You can configure the virtual COM port to communicate with the physical computer through a named pipe. If the named pipe is on a remote computer, you must also specify the computer name.' 'COM port' makes me think of dial-up connections with sketchy protocol stacks. But I have been wondering if this could be a way to have a Bluetooth PAN connection (or some equivalent) without actually having Bluetooth in my VM (which is another thing that is definitely limited in a Hyper-V VM). Robert Aldwinckle.