Hi all!
Anno domini 2021 Sat, 16 Jan 19:41:35 -0800
William Morder via tde-users scripsit:
[...]
The problem is that Linux systems in general seem to have a problem sometimes
with mounting a flash drive or SD card, but only after they have been used in
another device, such as a smartphone or a non-Linux system.
I put a large music collection on a new SD card, for listening while I am
outdoors walking, but when I went to change some of the items, now I find
that my Linux system refuses to mount the drive. The same has happened with
fat32 flash drives.
This does not happen with other hard drives, such as an external hard drive
that is formatted NTFS; only with fat32 flash drives or (I forget the
filesystem here) SD cards.
Also I believe that smartphones can really mess up the data on SD cards, as I
had a lot of weirdness there. For example: a folder for one artist was
instead filled with music from an entirely different artist. This could not
have been a mistake on my part, as I have the originals, all tidy and
organized, and the contents of the flash drive were first organized on a
folder that resides in my desktop computer. Thus all I need to do is copy the
contents of that folder to my SD card.
It is only when I tried to copy the contents of that SD card to another
location, then suddenly everything got messed up.
So I believe that Kate might be onto something there, that formatting with
Linux first could eliminate some of that mess.
Bill
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Looks like this is complints about FAT32 are not the cause of my observations. Please see
the attached screenshot: upper half of windows uses system:/media/sdb and shows the
describes malfuncions (i.e.: <del> not working, no autorefresh), the lower half
shows the very device but where it's mounted in the filesystem as /media/toshiba and
there it works as expected (i.e.: <del> working and autorefresh working).
So this is definitly a TDE problem. Is there a way to get rid of
"system:/media/" and just use the real mountpoint instead?
Nik
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