On Sun, 27 Jun 2004 21:32:23 -0400, Greg Swallow <gswallow@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > where # is 0, 1, then 2 > > ln -s /dev/ttyUSB# /dev/pilot (create default /dev for gnome-pilot) > > chmod 666 /dev/ttyUSB# (0, 1, and 2) > chmod 666 /dev/pilot (the new /dev) > Your instructions are a little unclear -- are you saying you should do the link (the ln command) for all three files? 'Cos that won't work -- once the first file is linked to that file name (/dev/pilot), ln will give you the error message that the file already exists. The /dev/pilot link needs to be made *only* to the /dev/ttyUSB? device on which your particular device passes data (although they all open two channels, only one is used for data -- the other is (at a guess) for communication control). On a Tungsten-line handheld, that port is /dev/ttyUSB1. On an m5xx, it's /dev/ttyUSB0. To figure out which it is for your particular device, kill off gpilotd, and try the following (after changing the permissions on the ports as above)... pilot-xfer -p /dev/ttyUSB{0 or 1} -l ...which will print a list of all the databases on your handheld (if the connection port was the correct one). If it just hangs, do a Ctrl-C and try the other port. -- Ben Steeves ben.steeves@xxxxxxxxx GPG ID: 0xB3EBF1D9 http://www.metacon.ca/