I have a GoPro Camera that has formatted the SD Card to a ExFat file system and Linux cannot read the sd card. What do I have to do to be able to read card, I can only read it in Windows 7.
On 01/22/2014 06:29 PM, Jim wrote:
I have a GoPro Camera that has formatted the SD Card to a ExFat file system and Linux cannot read the sd card. What do I have to do to be able to read card, I can only read it in Windows 7.
yum search exfat
exfat-utils.x86_64 : Utilities for exFAT file system fuse-exfat.x86_64 : Free exFAT file system implementation
Try installing fuse-exfat
HI
On Wed, Jan 22, 2014 at 7:29 PM, Jim wrote:
I have a GoPro Camera that has formatted the SD Card to a ExFat file system and Linux cannot read the sd card. What do I have to do to be able to read card, I can only read it in Windows 7.
RPM Fusion repository has fuse-exfat which you can use
Rahul
On 01/23/14 08:29, Jim wrote:
I have a GoPro Camera that has formatted the SD Card to a ExFat file system and Linux cannot read the sd card. What do I have to do to be able to read card, I can only read it in Windows 7.
A hardware alternative to what has already been mentioned is to use a 32GB SD card. Your GoPro will format that, and smaller SD Cards, in FAT32.
On 01/22/2014 07:34 PM, Steven Stern wrote:
On 01/22/2014 06:29 PM, Jim wrote:
I have a GoPro Camera that has formatted the SD Card to a ExFat file system and Linux cannot read the sd card. What do I have to do to be able to read card, I can only read it in Windows 7.
yum search exfat
exfat-utils.x86_64 : Utilities for exFAT file system fuse-exfat.x86_64 : Free exFAT file system implementation
Try installing fuse-exfat
Thanks guys that did the trick, thank god i don't have to go to Windows any more to update my GoPro camera.
On 01/22/2014 07:39 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:
On 01/23/14 08:29, Jim wrote:
I have a GoPro Camera that has formatted the SD Card to a ExFat file system and Linux cannot read the sd card. What do I have to do to be able to read card, I can only read it in Windows 7.
A hardware alternative to what has already been mentioned is to use a 32GB SD card. Your GoPro will format that, and smaller SD Cards, in FAT32.
Yes , I noticed that when I went from a 32gb to a 64gb. but I wanted more space for Video.
On 01/22/2014 07:34 PM, Steven Stern wrote:
On 01/22/2014 06:29 PM, Jim wrote:
I have a GoPro Camera that has formatted the SD Card to a ExFat file system and Linux cannot read the sd card. What do I have to do to be able to read card, I can only read it in Windows 7.
yum search exfat
exfat-utils.x86_64 : Utilities for exFAT file system fuse-exfat.x86_64 : Free exFAT file system implementation
Try installing fuse-exfat
My previous reply assumed you had a substrate material you wanted to use to make a printed circuit. If that is not the case, perhaps what you really want to know, for some reason, is if the material is excessively lossy. A crude "measurement" is to put the material in the microwave oven along with a glass or cup of water. Run the oven on high for about a minute. (The water is to provide a load to the maggie in case the material is *not* lossy.) It the material gets warm, is is somewhat lossy. If it gets hot, it is very lossy. It would be wise to watch thru the window--if it starts to smoke, stop the test!
--doug, WA2SAY
On 23 January 2014 02:55, doug dmcgarrett@optonline.net wrote:
On 01/22/2014 07:34 PM, Steven Stern wrote:
On 01/22/2014 06:29 PM, Jim wrote:
I have a GoPro Camera that has formatted the SD Card to a ExFat file system and Linux cannot read the sd card. What do I have to do to be able to read card, I can only read it in Windows 7.
yum search exfat
exfat-utils.x86_64 : Utilities for exFAT file system fuse-exfat.x86_64 : Free exFAT file system implementation
Try installing fuse-exfat
My previous reply assumed you had a substrate material you wanted to use to make a printed circuit. If that is not the case, perhaps what you really want to know, for some reason, is if the material is excessively lossy. A crude "measurement" is to put the material in the microwave oven along with a glass or cup of water. Run the oven on high for about a minute. (The water is to provide a load to the maggie in case the material is *not* lossy.) It the material gets warm, is is somewhat lossy. If it gets hot, it is very lossy. It would be wise to watch thru the window--if it starts to smoke, stop the test!
?
Regardless, doing this will probably invalidate your camera's warranty...