<quote who="John Clarke"> > Thanks Jeff. The card is recognised, it's just not mounted automatically:
Definitely worth feeding this into a bug. > > I'd recommend filing a bug with as much information you can glean about > > the PCMCIA/CF adaper as possible. > > I want to be sure it's not something that I'm doing (or not doing) first. > Is there a config file somewhere I have to edit to make it automount? No. I mean, you can look at the "Removable storage" preferences dialogue, but I can't imagine you've changed it in any way that would effect this. If USB disks work, this should also work (as far as policy goes). > > Quick thing you can try - boot with it unplugged, run > > hal-device-manager, plug it in and see what happens. > > It sees the adapter when it's plugged in. lshw tells me this: You can see it in hal-device-manager? If so, definitely file a bug. It may just need a bit of hardware ID / capabilities tweaking. - Jeff -- linux.conf.au 2007: Sydney, Australia http://lca2007.linux.org.au/ "So please lets focus on preparing to beat up our neighbours instead of spending all the energy on domestic violence." - Christian Schaller on GNOME -- SLUG - Sydney Linux User's Group Mailing List - http://slug.org.au/ Subscription info and FAQs: http://slug.org.au/faq/mailinglists.html