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Posts: 97 | Thanked: 9 times | Joined on Nov 2007
#1
I am sure this is simple, but cant see where I can copy images I have on my SD card directly onto my Nokia or onto the another SD card in the device (once installed)
 
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Posts: 58 | Thanked: 7 times | Joined on Dec 2007 @ Toronto, Hong Kong
#2
File Manager doesn't it work?
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[=Talon88 ~ N800 ~ OS2008=]
 
Posts: 191 | Thanked: 29 times | Joined on Sep 2007 @ Ottawa
#3
Originally Posted by Talon88 View Post
File Manager doesn't it work?
Depending on where he wants to copy the photos, _no_ it _doesn't_ work! One of my complaints is that the included file manager doesn't show one the entire filesystem. For example, File Manager can not copy things or even "see" the user's home directory, only MyDocs in the directory.

I would love to find another file manager which can see the entire filesystem. Personally I use MC, but would prefer a GUI based one.

Craig...
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N800, Think Outside Kbd, 8GB SDHC Card (OCZ, ext2), and 8GB SD Card (Patriot formatted as VFAT)
Zaurus SL-6000, IR Keyboard, 1GB SD Card
 
akd's Avatar
Posts: 304 | Thanked: 32 times | Joined on Nov 2007 @ somewhere in the far south
#4
Originally Posted by cvmiller View Post
Depending on where he wants to copy the photos, _no_ it _doesn't_ work! One of my complaints is that the included file manager doesn't show one the entire filesystem. For example, File Manager can not copy things or even "see" the user's home directory, only MyDocs in the directory.

I would love to find another file manager which can see the entire filesystem. Personally I use MC, but would prefer a GUI based one.

Craig...
Try this (look for Chinook version) ..just use it with caution
 
Posts: 97 | Thanked: 9 times | Joined on Nov 2007
#5
Thank you, I will play around with this.
 
Posts: 157 | Thanked: 96 times | Joined on Nov 2007 @ Oxford, UK
#6
Originally Posted by cvmiller View Post
Depending on where he wants to copy the photos, _no_ it _doesn't_ work! One of my complaints is that the included file manager doesn't show one the entire filesystem. For example, File Manager can not copy things or even "see" the user's home directory, only MyDocs in the directory.

I would love to find another file manager which can see the entire filesystem. Personally I use MC, but would prefer a GUI based one.

Craig...
If you want file manager to see the whole filesystem then all you have to do is create a link to it. Run xterm:

$ ln -s / MyDocs/root

then you can browse anywhere you want.
 

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Posts: 129 | Thanked: 81 times | Joined on Dec 2007 @ Austin, TX
#7
Originally Posted by Duncan View Post
If you want file manager to see the whole filesystem then all you have to do is create a link to it. Run xterm:

$ ln -s / MyDocs/root

then you can browse anywhere you want.
I'm not a complete Linux newb, but I'm still definitely in the learning stage. Could you break this command down and explain how it works so I can apply it elsewhere? Much appreciated.
 
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Posts: 129 | Thanked: 81 times | Joined on Dec 2007 @ Austin, TX
#8
I just noticed a few hours ago that Media Player was no longer updating the media library when I put new music and videos on the memory card. Canola2 wouldn't update either. The file system shortcut is the only major change I've made lately, so I deleted the shortcut and now both Media Player and Canola2 work fine. Any ideas why or how to fix it?
 
Posts: 157 | Thanked: 96 times | Joined on Nov 2007 @ Oxford, UK
#9
Breaking down the command:

The 'ln' command creates a couple of different types of links to files. Plain 'ln /some/file /other/link' makes hard link, i.e. a new directory entry /other/link which refers to the exact same file as /some/file. In Unix/Linux systems each entry in a directory simply gives a name to a file: a file can have many different names, or even none at all. There is no way after creating a hard link to tell which is the original name of the file and which was created second. If you delete one filename the other will still exist.

There are some limitations though: hard links to a file must all be on the same device as the file (so you cannot link to a file on a memory card), and you cannot create a hard link to a directory: the file-system could support that, indeed the latest Apple operating system does, but it would make it possible to create infinite loops in the filesystem which would cause problems.

The '-s' option to 'ln' makes it create a 'symbolic link'. This is a bit like a windows 'shortcut': it is a special type of file which contains a path to another file. When you access the link then it is usually just like accessing the file directly, but programs which want to can detect when they are using a symbolic link: they aren't symmetric the way hard links are. If you delete the original file then the link will become broken. If you want you can create a symbolic link to anything which has a path even on another device. You can also create symbolic links which point to directories, and that lets you create loops in the filesystem.

Programs which walk over a Linux filesystem are supposed to be intelligent about symbolic links and not end up going round in circles forever. There are several ways to do this, but the simplest is just never to follow a symbolic link: when you are walking the entire filesystem you'll find everything anyway.

However, it looks like I gave you bad advice over that shortcut. There is a bug report about this: https://bugs.maemo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1760

Bascially it seems that there is a process called 'metalayer-crawler' which walks over the filesystem looking for media files and indeexing them. Unfortunately this process follows symlinks, so if you create a link which causes a loop in the filesystem it just goes round in circles. The result is your media never gets indexed, and your battery gets drained.

The bug report I linked to says it is fixed, but it doesn't look fixed to me.
 

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Posts: 129 | Thanked: 81 times | Joined on Dec 2007 @ Austin, TX
#10
Thanks Duncan. That explains why my tablet was acting so slowly, too. I didn't even make that association, but when I used load-applet to list processes metalayer-crawler was showing a system load of >300%. I just didn't know what that process was. As for running down the battery, I knew I had charged it. I was starting to think I had gone senile or something.
 
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