Despite the claims, all cameras do not appear as hard disks. The chipset
that Nikon use in their CoolPix series, and that is used in many other
cameras (it is not made by Nikon) implement a unique protocol that must be
implemented to access the files on the camera. For this camera, at least,
gphoto simply does not work as advertised. I have spent lots of time
with it. I wound up sticking to the memory cards. Life is too short...

So, step one: what type of camera is it?

On Mon, 11 Nov 2002 10:19:49 -0800 (PST)
"Kevin O'Gorman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> I don't see a SxS for digital cameras, and I'm not having much luck
> figuring out how to download my pictures under Linux.  Under Windoze,
> the camera just appears as a storage device.
> 
> This is one of the 3 reasons that keep me using Windoze.  The other
> main one is the inability of wine to properly handle file selection
> for the Hexy game.  I also run Win4Lin for Quicken.  I would love
> to get past all 3 and get rid of all this dual-booting.


-- 
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| Roger Oberholtzer          |   E-mail:        [EMAIL PROTECTED] |
| OPQ Systems AB             |      WWW:  http://www.opq.se/ |
| Erik Dahlbergsgatan 41-43  |    Phone: Int + 46 8   314223 |
| 115 32 Stockholm           |   Mobile: Int + 46 733 621657 |
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