I just plugged my S4 (AT&T) into Fedora 20 and I can see both memory and
the SD Card.

On 03/26/2014 07:16 AM, Brian Chabot wrote:
>
> I have an S4 and I feel your frustration
>
> I ended up using Astro File Manager for Android and transfering with
> Linux via sftp.
>
> Brian
>
> On Mar 25, 2014 11:51 PM, "Ben Scott" <dragonh...@gmail.com
> <mailto:dragonh...@gmail.com>> wrote:
>
>       Work has provided me with a new handheld computer, a Galaxy S4, made
>     by Samsung.  It runs Android 4.3 plus whatever unspeakable horrors
>     Samsung and Verizon have inflicted upon it.  There's a microSD flash
>     memory card mounted inside, and I'd like to be able to copy files to
>     and from it, from my Linux home desktop.  This is proving unreasonably
>     hard.
>
>       Aside from coping general documents, photos, etc., back and forth, I
>     have a large collection of MP3 files on my desktop that I want to keep
>     in sync on my handheld -- adds, changes, *and* deletes.  rsync does a
>     fine job of this on a filesystem.  My previous handhelds let me plug
>     in the USB cable and access the mem card as a USB Mass Storage Class
>     (MSC) device.  In other words, like a disk drive.  Block device
>     appeared, I mounted it, I did filesystem things, I unmounted it, done.
>      Apparently that's not an option for this device.
>
>       Difficulty: I can't root the device.  Corporate policy.  Whatever I
>     do has to play by the rules.  Apps are generally OK, but not apps that
>     attempt to circumvent security mechanisms.
>
>       It appears the Galaxy really wants to speak MTP (Media Transfer
>     Protocol).  I've been playing with MTP stuff on Linux.  My desktop is
>     running Debian 7.4 "wheezy", kernel 3.2.0-4 package version 3.2.54-2.
>
>       There's some issue that causes libmtp to hang for 20-30 seconds
>     whenever it opens the device.  That's maddeningly irritating at best.
>     If you're wanting to run a bunch of commands in sequence, it's
>     basically a showstopper.
>
>       I've played around with the mtp-tools package from Debian (package
>     version 1.1.3-35-g0ece104-5).  It lacks a command to create
>     directories.  It can't transfer more than one file at a time (see
>     "showstopper", above).  The commands lack any documentation or help.
>     I think they're actually just example skeletons from the libmtp
>     sources that were packaged up and passed off as utilities.  :-p
>
>       I tried the mtpfs FUSE filesystem (1.1, built from source).  I found
>     it couldn't create directories.  That's a problem if I want to
>     replicate a directory tree (see MP3 collection, above).
>
>       I tried gmtp (pkg ver 1.3.3-1).  It suffers from the libmtp hang
>     issue, but at least once it's connects is responsive.  It can create
>     directories.  But it can only transfer files in one directory at a
>     time.  (Ibid.)
>
>       I could, of course, take the mem card out of the handheld, plug it
>     into my desktop's card reader, and do the I/O that way.  Problem there
>     is, I've got a fancy sealed protective case for the handheld.  Opening
>     it repeatedly is bad for it.  And annoying.  And exposes the handheld
>     to damage.
>
>        I've seen some suggestions of using "cloud" storage, like Dropbox
>     or Google Music, etc.  It seems silly to have to send many gigabytes
>     out my netfeed only to have to immediately download it again, on the
>     same feed, just to copy between devices which are six inches apart and
>     connected via USB cable.
>
>       Anyone got a better idea?  Bluetooth?  Wifi?  Floppy disk?
>
>     -- Ben
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>
>
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-- 
Jerry Feldman <g...@blu.org>
Boston Linux and Unix
PGP key id:3BC1EB90 
PGP Key fingerprint: 49E2 C52A FC5A A31F 8D66  C0AF 7CEA 30FC 3BC1 EB90


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