Israel Goitom wrote: > I am not sure if I should be expecting this in Linux, In most UNIX OS's (including Linux), you need to "mount" devices before you can use them. This includes hard drives, optical media (e.g. CD-ROM's), USB drives (external hard drives, flash drives, etc.) and so on. Until you start installing/removing hard drives you don't need to worry about those, as they are mounted for you at boot time... as well as any other media that happen to be present (i.e. I'm guessing this is why you can see a disc that is in your computer at boot time). > but when I started > using the KDE desktop I started noticing that if I boot the machine with a > CD in I can read it, but once I remove the cd and replace it with another > one, I can not see it at all. > > How do I get to see my CD after I have put it in the cdrom? In KDE there is usually an icon on your desktop for removable media the system knows about, e.g. optical drives ('cd-rom', 'dvd' or similar), also e.g. any flash drives your system knows about. If you right-click on these you should get a 'mount'/'unmount' option. You should also unmount devices before removing them (for optical drives you usually* cannot remove the disc until you unmount the drive) to ensure that all data has been fully written. (* the 'eject' option does the unmount for you... and also ejects the disc, of course :-).) -- Mathew (sorry, .sig file is on the other computer) ___________________________________________________ This message is from the kde mailing list. Account management: https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kde. Archives: http://lists.kde.org/. More info: http://www.kde.org/faq.html.