Steve Litt <sl...@troubleshooters.com> wrote:

> With /dev/sd? you can at least try to guess which one got
> plugged in last, and then verify.

It's certainly no warse (probably better actually) than the Windows world where 
it could be E:, F:, or something else - and it could even change depending 
which USB port it was plugged into !

On that latter one, from listening to some of the helldesk chatter, it seems 
over the years we've had problems with customer backups failing because the 
customer plugged the removable drive into a different USB socket, so it got a 
different letter, and so the backup failed. Talk about a pile of steaming 
manure built on top of another pile of well seasoned manure. Drive letters, so 
1970s :-/

As a Mac (OS X) desktop user, I'm used to drives being mounted on 
/Volume/<name> where <name> is the filesystem name (aka label). I'm trying to 
think if I've had a situation where there's been a clash - but I suspect if 
there is then the second one mounted would be mounted on /Volumes/<name>-2 
which seems to be the pattern OS X uses for various things when there's a clash.

As a Linux (almost all command line) user, I'm used to sdxn for working with 
partitions. Since this program is aimed at people not using file managers, then 
I rather think most of your target audience will be similar.

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