On Thu, 6 Dec 2012, Craig White wrote: > > On Dec 6, 2012, at 6:08 AM, me@xxxxxxxxxx wrote: > >> Hi, >> >> Has anyone figured out how to mount a Samsung note 2 on Centos 6? When I plug >> it in to the usb port it is detected and the get the following in the log: >> >> Dec 6 08:02:23 tigger kernel: usb 1-5: new high speed USB device number 35 using ehci_hcd >> Dec 6 08:02:23 tigger kernel: usb 1-5: New USB device found, idVendor=04e8, idProduct=6860 >> Dec 6 08:02:23 tigger kernel: usb 1-5: New USB device strings: Mfr=2, Product=3, SerialNumber=4 >> Dec 6 08:02:23 tigger kernel: usb 1-5: Product: SAMSUNG_Android >> Dec 6 08:02:23 tigger kernel: usb 1-5: Manufacturer: SAMSUNG >> Dec 6 08:02:23 tigger kernel: usb 1-5: SerialNumber: 42f7ad039a3d8f3b >> Dec 6 08:02:23 tigger kernel: usb 1-5: configuration #1 chosen from 2 choices >> >> lsusb shows: >> Bus 001 Device 035: ID 04e8:6860 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd GT-I9100 Phone [Galaxy S II], GT-P7500 [Galaxy Tab 10.1] >> >>> From there I cannot figure out how to mount it. >> >>> From goggling it would appear that I need adb and some udev rules. >> >> Does anyone know how to get this to mount? > > ---- > I don't but the bigger problem is that if you try to attach to the built-in > storage, that would require MTP, support for which on Linux is meager to > non-existent but the Galaxy Note 2 does have an SD slot and any SD cards > should be obvious via USB Storage. I have a friend with a Galaxy Note that somehow got his to mount both his SD card and the built-in storage using adb. The problem is he cannot remember what he did. That fone also uses MTP. I was hoping that I can find the magic incantation to be able to do the same thing with my Note 2. > The easier/best solution would likely be to use an Android program called > WiFi Explorer (I paid the guy $2 I think for the pro version) and it's > really, really nice and easy. Also, I found SSHDroid to be relatively easy > to use (requires using 'scp' or rsync via ssh to copy files to/from. Thanks for the suggestions. I had not thought of going that way. The more I think about this, the better I like it. I have some automated scripts I use to back up some of my data via rsync. The SSHDroid seems like it would work for that and maybe allow me to run my scripts via a cron job and not have to worry about being connected to a wire. WiFi Explorer looks good also. Hard to go wrong for $.99. :-) Regards, -- Tom me@xxxxxxxxxx Spamtrap address me123@xxxxxxxxxx _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos