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Sep 28 2005, 01:30 PM
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#1
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Group: Members Posts: 11 Joined: 3-September 05 Member No.: 8,024 |
After getting WiFi to work, I'm like a kid on Christmas morning,
playing with my new toy. First thing was to play a tune, so I used Konqueror's smb:// protocol to copy over an MP3. Not finding a folder named Media_Files, I just put it in Text_Files. Hey! The Media Player found it there. The question: Is that normal, usual practice, to use one of the existing folders? Or can I create more folders without worrying whether Media Player will find them? -- MM |
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Sep 29 2005, 01:56 AM
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#2
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Group: Members Posts: 77 Joined: 4-November 04 From: Phoenix, Arid-Zona Member No.: 5,344 |
Well I believe Media Player may very well find the files wherever you put them but it takes time having to scan through everywhere to look for them.
On the other hand, the Zaurus seems to have a set way of doing things where if you have an SD chip or a CF card or heck even the internal flash, you'll generall find that you have a structure that looks like Documents/ Documents/Music_Files Documents/Video_Files Documents/Text_Files Documents/Install_Files etc. So if you put them in the Music_Files directory you should be alright. That's where I was putting them. |
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Sep 29 2005, 05:00 AM
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#3
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Group: Members Posts: 97 Joined: 15-December 04 Member No.: 5,933 |
QUOTE(polito @ Sep 29 2005, 09:56 AM) Well I believe Media Player may very well find the files wherever you put them but it takes time having to scan through everywhere to look for them. I think the only way to hide files from Media Player is to put then in a "hidden" directory that begin with a dot. It skips those when it searches. This behavior of Media Player is a bit lame when you have a huge amount of storage as the search takes a very long time to wade through all your files that have nothing to do with it. This results in bizarre installations like putting the header files for zgcc in a .include directory so they don't slow down Media Player. John |
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Sep 29 2005, 06:27 AM
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#4
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Group: Members Posts: 11 Joined: 3-September 05 Member No.: 8,024 |
Thanks for all the good information on file locations.
I don't have any SD of CF accessories, so I was just looking at the internal flash. The more I see of how Sharp has set up the internal workings of the SL-6000L, the more I learn. Sharp seems to want the user to have as little trouble as possible, the General User, that is. Someone who wants to install a compiler and get into the internals of Linux might find Sharp's setup somewhat of a roadblock. So, if you put a music file in the image directory, it will still play - that's OK. If you want to access Samba over WiFi, that's blocked because some hacker will steal Paris Hilton's phonebook. That's OK, too. At least, Sharp let's you use directory names starting with a dot, for some measure of separation. As long as the SL-6000L doesn't make me angry, we'll get along together. -- MM |
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Lo-Fi Version | Time is now: 25th May 2013 - 04:12 AM |