Yeah, these things work fairly well in a Linux machine (I am not sure about that specific model, but I think that most of them are simply treated like a PCMCIA IDE device (as stated)). Linux, dd, and a hex editor are very handy for retrieving filesystems "lost" by other less friendly operating systems. Granted it is a painful process. -Austin Bob George wrote: > > "Eric Katherman" wrote: > > > Does anybody know how (and if) I can get one of those PCMCIA Compact > > Flash cards to work /w Linux. I am using SuSE 8.0 PRO on a Gateway > Solo > > 2550 and the PCMCIA card is a BSA card. Any pointers would be great! > > As a matter of fact, I picked one up this afternoon. I'm running Debian > 2.2 (unstable) with PCMCIA support working on Dell laptops. When I plug > the card in, I get a message indicating it's been recognized by the > PCMCIA subsystem. The message includes a reference to the device > (/dev/hdi with a reference to IDE device 4 IIRC -- I'm not able to bring > it up at the moment). Specifics on your system may vary. > > After that: > > mount -t vfat /dev/hdi1 /mnt/flash > > (after mkdir /mnt/flash natch) works just fine. They come preformated > with FAT, but cfdisk seems to have seen it just fine as /dev/hdi. > > I'm using it to transfer data to/from logging probes I'm using at a > client site with no outside network connectivity. Very slick and easy to > use. I'm using the $20 Apacer adapter and budget $40 BSA 128MB CF card > from Fry's... and despite all that, it STILL works! :) > > - Bob > > ________________________________________________ > See http://PLUG.phoenix.az.us/navigator-mail.shtml if your mail doesn't post to the list quickly and you use Netscape to write mail. > > PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us > http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss