2 alternatives, that may be determined by the camera (ie some go one way,
some the other, some may do both)
older cameras had diverse interfaces, and tend to be supported by
gphoto2, which is essentially a command line tool. you download the pics
to the current dir by typing somethinng like
gphoto2 -P , and it downloads everything on the camera
gphoto2 -T for the thumbnails etc.
more modern cams tend to use usb-storage, so the end up looking like a
scsi device.
take a look at your logs as you plug it in and unplug it. try gphoto2
(it supports your camera) and/or modprobing usb-storage.
gphoto2 --list-cameras|grep -i sony|grep -i dsc
"Sony DSC-F1" (EXPERIMENTAL)
"Sony DSC-F55"
"Sony DSC-F707V (PTP mode)" (TESTING)
"Sony DSC-P30 (PTP mode)" (TESTING)
"Sony DSC-P32 (PTP mode)" (TESTING)
"Sony DSC-P5 (PTP mode)" (TESTING)
"Sony DSC-P50 (PTP mode)" (TESTING)
"Sony DSC-S75 (PTP mode)" (TESTING)
"Sony DSC-S85 (PTP mode)" (TESTING)
looks like you have to put the camera into PTP mode, whatever that is.
consult ya manual!
On Thu, 23 Oct 2003 15:07:04 +1300
Michael Pearce <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Has anyone had experience with USB cameras.
>
> I have a SONY DSC P32 that I would like to mount and copy some images from.
>
> Any ideas... clues etc on how to mount it?? It is supposed to be a
> "Standard" storage type device.
>
>
> Mike
>
>
>
> --
> Linux Rocks!
>