Subject: Re: Digital cameras (USB esp.) on NetBSD.
To: Herb Peyerl <hpeyerl@beer.org>
From: Richard Rauch <rauch@eecs.ukans.edu>
List: netbsd-help
Date: 10/21/2000 15:08:23
> > * Olympus claims an uncompressed image mode among its features.
> > (Presumably, this is a lossless format. (^&)
>
> err, or as 'lossless' as digital can be.
Touche'. (^&
> > Any guidence w.r.t. cameras that work with our favorite OS would be
> > appreciated. (Experiences re. camera reliability, and practical advice on
[...]
> While not USB, I was pleased to try a friends Kodak somethingorother with
> the CompactFlash cards. He had a 64MB card and the little CF to PCMCIA
> adapter. I slid it into my Toshiba laptop running NetBSD 1.4something
> and proceeded to mount the CF card as an MSDOS filesystem and look at the
That would be nice, if I could do PCMCIA. (Am I right in remembering that
there are PCMCIA interfaces that you can put into regular desktops? If
so, roughly what do they tend to cost, and do they work with NetBSD?)
> As far as I'm concerned, that's the level of functionality I'd find most
> optimal. I can carry extra 'film' with me on a holiday or whatever and not
> have to lug my laptop around...
I thought that the ability to swap ``digital film'' cards was fairly
standard. (The Olympus D-360L uses ``Smart Media'' cards, which I think
are non-volatile---they have to be non-volatile if you take them out of
the camera to put them into readers.)
Thanks, though. I'll look at the Kodiak.
"I probably don't know what I'm talking about." --rauch@eecs.ukans.edu