> I have a Casio EX-Z600 that isn't recognized by > OpenSolaris. Does anyone know how to get it > recognized? Attached is the relevant output from the > "prtconf -v" command.
I don't think the attachment made it, I don't see it either via the Jive forums or via the mailing list archives. I've had a couple of Casios, the first one (stolen) wouldn't talk to Solaris either, AFAIK (it also had a cradle). The replacement doesn't use a cradle, it just has a usb-to-mini-usb cable; I've never tried hooking it up directly. Most digital cameras with USB connections, in addition to anything proprietary they speak, either speak PictBridge (mostly meant to pass photos directly to a printer that also speaks it) or can look to the host as a storage device, or both. For example, I think my Nikon D70 has a setting for which it should speak. Those that can look like a storage device should probably talk ok to Solaris. Don't know if there's any capability to talk PictBridge in Solaris or any of its apps, although if anything is out there that does it via libusb (which lets the app handle things rather than needing an additional driver), it's possible. You can always remove the SD card and insert it in an SD card reader connected to the Solaris system. Not sure what the current support was for builtin ones on laptops (I think Garrett had worked on that), but I've had good luck with external USB card readers; mine's a Dazzle 8-in-1 or some such (works with both SD and CF, which takes care of me, along with a number of other formats). This message posted from opensolaris.org
