First question to answer is: Is the drive being detected? Unplug the drive, wait a minute and do: lsusb > /tmp/junk-lsusb-0.txt cat /proc/partitions > /tmp/junk-partitions-0.txt Now plug the drive, wait a minute and do: lsusb > /tmp/junk-lsusb-1.txt cat /proc/partitions > /tmp/junk-partitions-1.txt Then diff /tmp/junk-lsusb-?.txt If you see at leas one line you are good, otherwise you are dead in the water. If you can see the device, then: diff /tmp/junk-partitions-?.txt That's your partition. Depending on what you have (if you have) next steps are different. YMMV... ET Michael Havens writes: > Okay, when I was making a backup drive I did so on a drive that was too > small. (bummer) now, when I stick that device in nothing happens (the nice > little file manager doesn't appear). So I think that is because I created a > label for this drive. So I wonder to myself how to fix it. What I think of > is mkfs. What is a generic filesystem I can use on microsoft computers too? > is xtfs the best or should I go with fat 16/32? or am I incorrect that this > will fix the problem? > :-)~MIKE~(-: --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.phxlinux.org To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: http://lists.phxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss