I only found one page for this player. There used to be a second one last week, but I 
can't find it now.

http://www.digital-square.com/home_eng/products/main2.htm

Unfortunatelly this page does not give to much technical detail about the hardware. As 
the device was listed in lsusb as being made by samsung, I tried to find some chips on 
their website that provide the functionality for the player. I found only one chip 
that provided the decoding capabilities and the USB interface and for that they had 
the full documentation online. But I don't know if the vendor lsubs provides is 
reliable in this case. At least both Samsung and this Digitasl Square Company that 
makes the player are both from Korea which is a weak hint that Samsung might actually 
provide the Chip for the player.
I will try to get some data from Snoopy as soon as possible.

Thanks

Ralph


On Thu, 12 Dec 2002 02:23:31 -0800
Christopher Li <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> I can take a look when you get the log file.
> 
> Once you get the log file. You can try to send
> the same URB to device under linux using usbdevfs.
> The device should reply the same way.
> 
> There is a user space lib call usblib can help you
> avoid doing kernel programming.
> 
> If you can duplicate the URB sequence, you can try to
> do something creative to let the device do what you
> want.
> 
> Do you have a URL for the device?
> 
> Chris 
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Ralph Gauges
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: 12/12/02 12:18 AM
> Subject: Re: [Linux-usb-users] unknown usb-storage device
> 
> On Wed, 11 Dec 2002 16:29:27 -0800
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> 
> > On Wed, Dec 11, 2002 at 05:26:32PM +0100, Ralph Gauges wrote:
> > > > The class type is "vend". USB Snoppy could be used  to reverse >
> engineer it
> > > > if someone has the time, motivation and skill (I don't have any of
> > > > those, sorry).
> > > 
> > > 
> > > That's at least something. Maybe someone who bought the thing has
> either of those.
> > > I already downloaded the tools and I will probably have a look at it
> once I find some time, unfortunatelly I am completetly lacking the
> knowledge. )-:
> > > Hope those tools come with a good documentation. (-:
> > 
> > USB SnoopyPro is pretty easy to use. Just follow the instructions
> > unpack the driver, install driver, select the device to snoop.
> > All these are done by clicking the mouse.
> > 
> > The hard part is decode the content of data.
> > 
> > Chris
> > 
> > 
> 
> I guess I will give it a try as soon as I have some time; maybe over
> X-mas. Is there any documentation on how what to do once one has the
> data? As I said, I don't have any experience in those things, but since
> the device can't do much more then upload and download files, or at
> least I don't need it to do more, it might not be to difficult to at
> least get usb-robot to work with the device under linux.
> Writing a driver would probably be a lot harder. Those are some wild
> guesses of mine, so what do you think?
> 
> Ralph
> 


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