On Tue, 2006-03-07 at 13:47 -0700, Craig White wrote: > On Tue, 2006-03-07 at 13:11 -0700, Mark Jarvis wrote: > > 1) I switch between Linux and Windows (XP). > > > > 2) I use Open Office in both. > > > > 3) I need my data available to both. > > > > 4) I use flash drives extensively. > > > > I've found out (the hard way) that while OO-Win has access to any and > > all fonts installed in Windows, OO-Linux has its own set of fonts with > > many of the common and popular fonts simply not available. The default > > substitutions for common Windows mono-spaced (Courier New) and serif > > (Times New Roman) fonts aren't too bad. The default substitution for the > > sans serif font I used to use heavily (Arial), however, stunk. It really > > messed up page and slide layout when I created something in OO-Win, then > > brought it up in OO-Linux. Two other fonts, Bitstream Vera Sans and > > Tahoma, however, are available in both and work quite nicely. > > > > I keep my data in a fat32/vfat partition that is accessible to all OS > > installations. I've found that adding ",umask=0,users" to the options in > > the applicable line in /etc/fstab makes it writable by any user (not > > just root) and any user can mount or unmount it. This also works for the > > flash drives, since they also are formatted fat32/vfat. I don't know why > > the "umask=0" option isn't default. BTW, some distros insist on > > re-writing /etc/fstab on boot, dumping any special fixes you--the > > owner--may have added. Usually giving it "400" permissions stops that, > > but not always. > > > > Just a couple of tips that might help someone. > ---- > 1. http://corefonts.sourceforge.net/ > > 2. don't know what you mean by some distro's - things have been changing > from 2.4 kernel to early 2.6 kernel to current 2.6 kernel to apparently > new versions of udev methodology and likely since the device is a USB > key, fooling in /etc/fstab is the last place you want to be but playing > in udev.rules is the likely place you want to make your 'user' changes. > > The point of udev is to make devices such as these available in user > space and not need root permissions - which is exactly what you are > trying to accomplish it but you are trying to brute force it > via /etc/fstab rather than finding out the specific methodology for your > version/distribution. > > If this were a redhat distribution, you would > alter, /etc/udev/rules.udev/10-udev.rules and you could put an entry for > the specific device, where it mounts (generally /media), who can use it, > mount it, eject it, etc. ---- I should have linked the following for an excellent over all view of udev http://www.reactivated.net/writing_udev_rules.html Craig --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change you mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss