Greetings Ray, Chuck, Joshua and all who replied.. Apparently my original problem was getting two flash/jump drives that "happened" to not work with Linux.. So be it. <grin>
Anyway it seems, at least the Lexar brands are no problem and, probably with kernel 2.6.X, the others might not be either.. At any rate I visited the only "computer store" we have in this rural area finding they stocked three Lexar models; one called "sport" the others "secure." They also had an "Impact" 256mB that turned out to be a Lexar sans the "secure?" software.. Plugged into this box it works like a charm.. It was $10 less than the Lexar price but with a 90 day warranty vice sth like 4 years for the "genuine" Lexar... We learn something every day, eh? APPRECIATE one and all.. Hal - in Terra Alta, WV - Slackware GNU/Linux 9.0 (2.4.20-1) > Hal MacArgle wrote: > >Greetings: Running Slackware 9.0 and 9.1; kernels 2.4.20 or 2.4.22, > >bare.i installation, I've experienced good support for all USB > >devices except Flash Drives. > > > >First one bought was a Link-Max UL-641 that, plugged in, was > >immediately accessible by the kernel with no configuring by me.. > > > >Later attempts with other brands, no such luck.. As I look at the > >retail boxes not a single one mentions Linux, so was wondering what > >others have discovered.. It's no fun buying then returning just to > >see what works or doesn't... <grin> > > > >Most of the comments on the Web seem to indicate this is not a > >problem but I've found otherwise.. One vendor, Kingston, said flat > >out that Linux is not supported by their devices.. > > > >Best and TIA. - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-newbie" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.linux-learn.org/faqs