Thank you!
# Add a folder
sudo mkdir /media/USERNAME
# assign the folder to my user
sudo chown USERNAME.USERNAME /media/USERNAME
This worked perfectly.
James
*
“Patience is the companion of wisdom.”
- Saint Augustine
*
On Mon, Oct 22, 2012 at 5:56 PM, Paulo Rafael
Public bug reported:
After upgrade to 12.10 the memory card I used in the morning (12.04) will not
mount.
Message:
Unable to mount 2.0 GB Volume
Adding read ACL for uid 1000 to '/media/james' failed: Operation not supported
ProblemType: Bug
DistroRelease: Ubuntu 12.10
Package:
Update: it appears that the bug may be due to some kind of 'race
condition' between processes during boot.
After a later boot the icons 'popped back' to their 'proper' positions
(twice). They, apparently, hadn't lost any position information in the
interim, but have since returned to being drawn
On Sun, Nov 6, 2011 at 5:26 PM, Phil V 886...@bugs.launchpad.net
wrote:
Thanks for attaching the information. Unfortunately I was unable to
reproduce this on a virtualbox installation and on my laptop, but
hopefully someone else with a similar hardware and/or software
configuration to
Phil,
It looks like it didn't work. I saw a page to authorize access and clicked
on one hour (enough time to upload data?) but the terminal response
wasn't positive:
*james@white:~$ apport-collect 886667*
*The authorization page:*
* (
apport information
** Tags added: apport-collected oneiric running-unity
** Description changed:
I arrange non-overlapping icons on my desktop for tasks that I am working on
or files I want to read later.
When I boot the next time the bottom 'row' of icons are moved upwards, on top
of
apport information
** Attachment added: usr_lib_nautilus.txt
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/886667/+attachment/2587699/+files/usr_lib_nautilus.txt
** Changed in: nautilus (Ubuntu)
Status: Incomplete = New
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Phil,
Second time (I mean third time, after reboot ;-) was the charm.
I changed bug report to 'new' and the apport summary seems to be attached
to it now.
Thanks,
James
*Forty years ago few people had actually seen a computer;*
* today, no one can see one, to a first approximation,*
* as the