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Date:      Wed, 14 Apr 2004 21:39:35 -0400
From:      Brian Clapper <brian-freebsd-001@clapper.org>
To:        "Andrew L. Gould" <algould@datawok.com>
Cc:        Radek Kozlowski <radek@raadradd.com>
Subject:   Re: lament about freebsd sacrifices
Message-ID:  <200404150139.i3F1dZA3041096@z.inside.clapper.org>
In-Reply-To: <200404141706.07038.algould@datawok.com>
References:  <12586.63.109.229.22.1081967765.squirrel@webmail.alienwebshop.com> <200404142033.i3EKX9A3032279@z.inside.clapper.org> <407DAE3B.9050408@raadradd.com> <200404141706.07038.algould@datawok.com>

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On 14 April, 2004, at 17:06 (-0500)
Andrew L. Gould <algould@datawok.com> wrote:

> On Wednesday 14 April 2004 04:33 pm, Radek Kozlowski wrote:
>
> > Just out of curiosity, you guys know about graphics/gphoto2 port?
> >
> > -Radek
>
> Yes.  I tried it; but couldn't get it to recognize the camera.  Once I figured
> out that I could mount the memory card, I stopped trying to get gphoto to
> work.  Mount/umount give me good functionality without an extra port.

Ditto. I typically mount the memory stick, copy the photos off via cp(1),
and use tools like jhead, ImageMagick and The Gimp to do what I need to do
to the JPEG files. I'm perfectly happy with that approach. In fact, I
*like* the idea that I can just cp(1) the files off my camera. It appeals
my Unix sensibilities.

Brian Clapper, http://www.clapper.org/bmc/
Science is what happens when preconception meets verification.



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