James McKenzie wrote: > Also, I just plugged in my USB 'stick' and it showed up as four devices > under the /dev directory (you have to be a system administrator AND > access this through Terminal.) > > The following is the result of using the ls (list) with the -l (long > format) command for these devices: > > brw-r----- 1 <user> operator 14, 10 Feb 19 18:39 disk4 > brw-r----- 1 <user> operator 14, 11 Feb 19 18:39 disk4s1 > > This is the block access (b) and the device is only read/write for me. > > crw-r----- 1 <user> operator 14, 10 Feb 19 18:39 rdisk4 > crw-r----- 1 <user> operator 14, 11 Feb 19 18:39 rdisk4s1 > > This is the character level access (c) and the same 'rights' are > bestowed upon the device. You might want to try this with the device > not plugged in and when it is plugged in. > > You want to map the 'raw' level (in my case rdisk4) to a drive letter, > if that is what the program requires. Otherwise, and if the program > requires the use of a hardware Windows driver, you are out of luck > trying to get this to work with Wine as it is now. > > James McKenzie Mine is showing up as only 1 USB, probably because it's not formatted as any filesystem: crw-r----- 1 <user> operator 14, 4 20 Feb 14:06 rdisk1 brw-r----- 1 <user> operator 14, 4 20 Feb 14:06 disk1 When the device is not plugged in, it's not showing up on the ls. What do you mean by a hardware Windows driver? Does this include drivers that come default with windows? Anna.