On Sat, 3 Sep 2005 20:48:18 -0700, Siri Amrit Kaur writes:
>I'm wanting to get a digital camera. I don't know anything about
>digital cameras or how to get them to work in Linux. I've never
>attached a USB device of any kind to my computer, I'm that far behind
>the times. My son has an Olympus Camedia C-50 and it takes great
>pictures. I've searched, but can't tell if it's supported in Linux.
>
>From what I've been reading, what I really need is a flash reader
>that's supported in Linux- the camera model doesn't matter so much.
>Do y'all agree? If so, what do I need to know about flash readers- or
>anything else camera-related- before I buy one?
>
>Thanks for any advice you can give me.
>
>Siri Amrit
I've used both the flash reader and USB connection directly and have never had any
issues. I've even plugged in a cheap little USB camera I bought for my kids in and
it worked without problem. I use gtkam and it works like a charm
(
http://gphoto.org/proj/gtkam). Only thing I can't do is adjust some of the camera
settings through the PC.
If my memory serves me right, any camera that doesn't use PTP mode, can be mounted
as a mass storage device. Depending on your kernel, you would need the modules
usb-storage and sd-mod. These cameras basically are a flash reader in themselves.
If it is a PTP camera, then you'd have to use software to get the pictures.
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