you should have no problem using adb & obviously would need the SDK in order to achieve that and MUST turn on the developer option (USB Debugging) in order for that to work and I suspect would also have to root the phone but that too can be done via adb. I am telling you though, the WifiExplorer is way cool and the pro version is easily worth the price. SSHDroid is easy enough to use and works well. Craig On Dec 6, 2012, at 11:05 AM, me@xxxxxxxxxx wrote: > 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 -- Craig White ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ craig.white@xxxxxxxxxx 1.800.869.6908 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ www.ttiassessments.com Register Now! TTI Winners' Conference 2013 January 20th - 22nd The Earlier You Register the More FREE Product You Receive Click here for more information! _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos