On Wed, 2010-09-29 at 12:27 +0100, Gary Stainburn wrote: > On Thursday 23 September 2010 00:23:33 Wolfgang S. Rupprecht wrote: > > Gary Stainburn <gary.stainburn@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes: > > > If you look at the following extract from /var/log/messages, you can see > > > that it gets as far as seeing the two devices (Phone memory and Micro SD > > > card) but doesn't make them available. The Toshiba shown below is the > > > memory stick that works. > > > > Did you use the Android pull-down menu and tap "USB Connected\nSelect to > > copy files to/from your computer"? Without doing that the storage is > > still owned by Android. If you select that you get to unount the > > storage from the android phone and make it available to the > > usb-connected computer for mounting. The file system isn't dual-ported. > > Only one device can mount it at once. > > > > -wolfgang > > Wolfgang > > I haven't done this, and I can't find the menu option on the Galaxy. > > I have found a number of posts saying to turn on USB debugging, and other > posts saying to not do that, > > If I do this, it works fine, and it looks like as part of this it does release > the SD cards from Android. Unmounting from Linux then gives them back to > Android, which can then access them fine again. > > I would like to be able to do this without having to use USB debugging, but > ultimately, I would like to know > > 1) why I need to do this in the first place. Surely choosing 'Mass Storage' on > the Galaxy should do this itself > 2) Why it works first time under Windows without having to install anything, > as soon as I choose 'Mass Storage'. ---- one of the issues is that Samsung is behind the curve in Android choosing to make all sorts of phones with all sorts of customizations for every carrier under the sun but never quite worked out many of the hardware issues with their phones. Consequently many things don't work as expected on the Samsung phones that work fine with HTC and Motorola phones. Eventually they will get their issues worked out. In the meantime, if all you need to do to make it work is to leave USB debugging turned on, that hardly seems to be worth making a fuss over - just leave it turned on and wait for Samsung to come out with updates. I noticed that they came up with updates for a couple of US carriers so their GPS finally works - that's a big improvement already. Craig -- This message has been scanned for viruses and dangerous content by MailScanner, and is believed to be clean. -- users mailing list users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines