-------- Original Message --------
Subject: | Re: [newbie] fstab - digital camara install |
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Date: | Fri, 23 Aug 2002 23:06:31 +0100 |
From: | John Richard Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> |
Reply-To: | [EMAIL PROTECTED] |
To: | [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED] |
References: | <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> |
Todd Slater wrote: >On Fri, Aug 23, 2002 at 09:19:05PM +0100, John Richard Smith wrote: > > >>Nigel Ridley wrote: >> >> >> >>>On Sun, 11 Aug 2002 16:19:55 +0100 >>>John Richard Smithwrote: >>> >>> >>> >>>I have a FujiFilm ix-100 usb camera with a SmartMedia card. >>>Could you please give me more info as to how to set it up. >>>Do I have to have scsi emulation for it or run it straight from a usb >>>mount? >>>I have been to gphoto's web site (and to the link for mass storage >>>devices) and have also been reading other postings on this list. So far, >>>having tried a few things I've come to a dead end. >>> >>>Any help would be appreciated. >>> >>>Nigel Ridley. >>> >>> >>Ok, the answer is yes , and no, I'm not entirely sure. Let me explain. >>This is my fstab entry for the digital camera :- >> >>/dev/sda1 /mnt/fujifilm vfat noauto,owner,ro,user 0 0 >> >> > >Mine is set up the same way, except I call mine /mnt/fuji :) > > > >>I created my own Icon on desktop which I call digitalcam, and I even >>created my own icon >>using Icon editor and added it to kde icon directory, and in the >>properties of this icon >>under device I set the settings to /dev/sda1 from the drop down list. >>and mount point >>to /mnt/fujifilm, from the drop down list. This makes mounting the >>device that much >>more convenient. >> >>You download the files from the camera to a directory of your choosing. >> >>I then put up either gphoto or gimp . Gphoto is very good but lacks >>cropping facilities, >>whereas gimp can do evrything, including putting the baby to bed.When >>each picture is as I want it I then send it off to a storeage partition >>on my hard drive where when enough have accumulated I write them to CD. >> >>John >> >> > >I did the same thing when I used KDE, but now . . . > >I wrote a bash script for this. I run "getpix" and it creates a >directory based on the date (YYYY_MM_DD), mounts my camera (naughty!), >copies the pictures to the new directory, umounts the camera, renames >the images (according to exif data, using jhead), and launches gqview >to display thumbs of that directory. > >I also wrote a script that tests the size of my images directory or any >directory for that matter. If the size gets above 650MB, it sends me an >e-mail telling me to burn a CD. I set this up in a cron job and have it >monitor various directories. > >Computers are fun again! > >Todd > > > > > > I must say that sound interesting, tell us all please . Why not start a new thread , How to set up getpix and have fun
John -- John Richard Smith [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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