On Wed, 2004-04-28 at 15:58, Drew Martin wrote:
> On Wednesday 28 Apr 2004 06:24, Stephen Kuhn wrote:
> > On Wed, 2004-04-28 at 05:29, Drew Martin wrote:
> > > Hello All,
> > > I have installed MKD10(CE) then upgraded, using Easy URPMI to
> > > MKD10(Official).
> > > The pro
On Wednesday 28 Apr 2004 06:24, Stephen Kuhn wrote:
> On Wed, 2004-04-28 at 05:29, Drew Martin wrote:
> > Hello All,
> > I have installed MKD10(CE) then upgraded, using Easy URPMI to
> > MKD10(Official).
> > The problem I have is that I have some CD's,with video files
> > on
On Wed, 2004-04-28 at 05:29, Drew Martin wrote:
> Hello All,
> I have installed MKD10(CE) then upgraded, using Easy URPMI to
> MKD10(Official).
> The problem I have is that I have some CD's,with video files on
> them.I would like to watch them,but I'm unable to browse the
Hello All,
I have installed MKD10(CE) then upgraded, using Easy URPMI to
MKD10(Official).
The problem I have is that I have some CD's,with video files on
them.I would like to watch them,but I'm unable to browse the CD,to able to do
this.
How can I mount the CD s
Michael wrote:
never used the cd burning programs in linux, so i have no preference.
personally, i'll go with whatever will work easily, and do what i want, which
includes doing data, pictures, music, and video.
yes i am running md9.1
charlie says all writer need scsi-emulation and he knows
On Sunday 06 July 2003 01:49 pm, John Richard Smith wrote:
>> root terminal and
>> type mount -a
>> that will mount everything in fstab afresh.
>>
just to make sure, i type "mount -a" no quotations, right?
good to know! thanks!
>
>> Yes, scsi emulation is fake ide , if you like. Some programme
On Sunday 06 July 2003 10:32 am, Michael wrote:
> On Saturday 05 July 2003 06:19 pm, John Richard Smith wrote:
> > in /etc/fstab , check every char is identicle including spaces, to,
> > none /mnt/cdrom supermount
> > dev=/dev/scd0,fs=auto,rw,--,iocharset=iso8859-15,codepage=850,umask=0 0 0
>
> ok,
Michael wrote:
On Saturday 05 July 2003 06:19 pm, John Richard Smith wrote:
in /etc/fstab , check every char is identicle including spaces, to,
none /mnt/cdrom supermount
dev=/dev/scd0,fs=auto,rw,--,iocharset=iso8859-15,codepage=850,umask=0 0 0
ok, opened a terminal, "su", password, kwrit
On Saturday 05 July 2003 06:19 pm, John Richard Smith wrote:
> in /etc/fstab , check every char is identicle including spaces, to,
> none /mnt/cdrom supermount
> dev=/dev/scd0,fs=auto,rw,--,iocharset=iso8859-15,codepage=850,umask=0 0 0
>
ok, opened a terminal, "su", password, kwrite, opened up fs
Michael wrote:
On Saturday 05 July 2003 06:19 pm, John Richard Smith wrote:
Essentially , if you want the nice easy gui way, just navigate to the
file in question,via home to / and click on the desired directories to
the file in question, then right mouse click the icon for that file ,
then "o
On Saturday 05 July 2003 06:19 pm, John Richard Smith wrote:
> Essentially , if you want the nice easy gui way, just navigate to the
> file in question,via home to / and click on the desired directories to
> the file in question, then right mouse click the icon for that file ,
> then "open with",
Michael wrote:
On Saturday 05 July 2003 02:16 pm, John Richard Smith wrote:
Do you know how to use a text editor ?
how hard is it? if it's simply deleting some text and entering new text in
it's place, i'm sure i can handle it, if i'm told where to do it, what i need
to change and w
> > Do you know how to use a text editor ?
>
> how hard is it? if it's simply deleting some text and entering new text in
It as easy as using notepad or word (w/o the puking).
You could try kate (it's pretty much like any other editor or word processor you may
have used):
If you are in KDE,
> >/dev/hda5 / ext3 defaults 1 1
> >none /dev/pts devpts mode=0620 0 0
> >/dev/hda6 /home ext3 defaults 1 2
> >none /mnt/cdrom supermount
> >dev=/dev/scd0,fs=auto,ro,--,iocharset=iso8859-1,codepage=850,umask=0 0 0
> >
> this is your writer/cdrom under supermount, and ought to work fine.
> But yo
On Saturday 05 July 2003 02:16 pm, John Richard Smith wrote:
>
> Do you know how to use a text editor ?
>
how hard is it? if it's simply deleting some text and entering new text in
it's place, i'm sure i can handle it, if i'm told where to do it, what i need
to change and what it needs to be
Michael wrote:
On Saturday 05 July 2003 12:50 pm, John Richard Smith wrote:
/dev/hda5 / ext3 defaults 1 1
none /dev/pts devpts mode=0620 0 0
/dev/hda6 /home ext3 defaults 1 2
none /mnt/cdrom supermount
dev=/dev/scd0,fs=auto,ro,--,iocharset=iso8859-1,codepage=850,umask=0 0 0
this is your write
On Saturday 05 July 2003 12:50 pm, John Richard Smith wrote:
>
> Go, Home directory , back to / , click on etc icon to /etc directory
> , skip past the blue directories to a file called fstab. There right
> mouse click fstab, and it opens in konqueror.
> then copy and paste to an open composer
Michael wrote:
On Saturday 05 July 2003 05:04 am, John Richard Smith wrote:
Probably, the best thing you can do here is post /etc/fstab here to see
what has happened.Then someone with more knowledge than I , can walk you
through supermount.
John
Go, Home directory , back to / , click
> > Probably, the best thing you can do here is post /etc/fstab here to see
> > what has happened.Then someone with more knowledge than I , can walk you
> > through supermount.
At the command line (xterm or some other terminal) type cat /etc/fstab and send the
results.
> wishing that "learn man
On Saturday 05 July 2003 05:04 am, John Richard Smith wrote:
>
> Probably, the best thing you can do here is post /etc/fstab here to see
> what has happened.Then someone with more knowledge than I , can walk you
> through supermount.
>
> John
i went into mandrake control center and copied this in
> my cd-rw drive isn't mounted. i can't figure out what's wrong either, because
> everything installed off the install CDs, but when i put a CD into my drive
> and try to access it, linux locks up completely. when i say locks up
> completely, i mean i actually have to hit the restart button on
Michael wrote:
ok, I've accomplished something hereI figured out how to actually see and access all the info on all the partitions I have created in windows (they're all FAT32 partitions).
Good.
my cd-rw drive isn't mounted. i can't figure out what's wrong either, because everything install
I have two CDs in my computer. One of them mounts automatically on boot, but
I would like to get my burner to mount as well.
How can I do this so I can use Grip, and what should I put in the fstab file
to get it to mount automatically?
Any ideas??
Want to buy your Pack or Services from Mandr
I needed to download a more current version of cdrecord than the one that
comes on mdk 8.0 to get my cdrw to work correctly.
Geof
*
On Monday 03 September 2001 08:45 pm, you wrote:
> I am having the same problem as David. No ma
>
SCSI Emulation is in two parts--first a message to the kernel to
tell it to assume emulation is done Second is a modprobe of
scsi and a link to the appropriate SCSI device
The first part is simple in /etc/lilo.conf or in drakboot
(Control Center Boot Config) make sure you have this
On Friday 31 August 2001 07:08 pm, David Park wrote:
> I am currently having trouble mounting my CD Burner. Can some one please
> tell me how I should define it in fstab. I have created a directory under
> /mnt but I am confused because under Harddrake,it is listed twice - as an
> IDE device and
I am currently having trouble mounting my CD Burner. Can some one please tell
me how I should define it in fstab. I have created a directory under /mnt
but I am confused because under Harddrake,it is listed twice - as an IDE
device and SCSI device. ie hdd and scd0
TIA
David
Want to buy yo
7.2 is kinda buggy with the CDROM. If it mounts OK, then you can use it.
In Terminal login to root ('su' then password), then 'umount cdrom' to unmount
it, swap the CD then 'mount /mnt/cdrom' and you can read the new one.
Don
hi, i was wondering how you can tell if your cd rom is mo
usually you can just type mount /mnt/cdrom to mount your cd.. mandrake 7.2 uses an automounter so you shouldnt have to do that manually ever. but if you use the mount command it might give you an error to help you solve your problem.Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.m
hi, i was wondering how you can tell if your cd rom is mounted or not. i
have mandrake 7.2 complete installed over windows with lnx4win. if i load a
cd into the cd rom while in windows, and than boot into linux, i am able to
read the cd. if i am already in linux, and put a cd in , i get erro
Well the commands to mount and unmount a cdrom are the
following:
mount /mnt/cdrom
umount /mnt/cdrom
If you have more than one CDROM you will have to add a
number to the end of it starting with 1. As in:
mount /mnt/cdrom1
umount /mnt/cdrom1
If you have a structure different than the default,
yo
Hello,
I'm using Linux Mandrake for a year now, and followed the new releases.
Recently I downloaded Mandrake71-inst.iso. When I booted the cdrom the
image was loaded, but then I got the following error message: "I could
not mount a cd on /dev/scd0". I did not have this problem with Mandrake
7
On Mon, 22 May 2000, Eduardo Arauz wrote:
>Hi everyone, i have this funny situation at boot time my kernet does not
>identify any scsi device but on saturday i was able to write a cd without a
>problem because the cd record and Xcdroast identify my cd-r as a cd writer
>and scsi device but
Hi everyone, i have this funny situation at boot time my kernet does not
identify any scsi device but on saturday i was able to write a cd without a
problem because the cd record and Xcdroast identify my cd-r as a cd writer
and scsi device but i cant mount the cd-r to work like a cd rom b
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