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#1 |
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Guest
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Mandriva 2008 vs LG U830 phone
Hi
we got an LG U830 mobile phone as a prezzie. It's a camera and MP3 player as well as a 3G phone. So we should be able to copy photos and MP3 files between the PC and the phone. Unfortunately Mandriva does not recognise it as a flash drive, as it does any other MP3 player in the house. It recognises the phone as a USB modem, but the PC already has an internet connection so I don't know what I should do with that. A small CD came with the phone; naturally the software on it only runs on various flavours of Windows. I have tried running them under Crossover 6.0.0 () but most of the programs simply will not run. Seem to be missing some Visual C++ runtimes; I have tried downloading the runtimes from Microsoft but I cannot get them to install in a Crossover Wine bottle. And maybe a windows emulator would be barking up the wrong tree anyhow. (The software that does run is unable to connect to the phone, I cannot make sense of it and it has no manual or help that I can find. So that's no good either.) I have also tried to rtfw; googling for a USB driver to connect the phone to my PC, using search strings like lg u830 usb driver linux without any success. Most results, if they're in a language I understand - regrettably, a limited set - mention linux in a sidebar as a link, rather than saying how I get a USB driver for Linux to talk to this phone. The user guide for the phone is also no help at all. Would anyone here have experience of such phones, and know if they can be used with Mandriva at all? Are phones like this supposed to look to Linux like flash drives, as cameras and MP3 players do when I plug them in? Is there a native Linux program for doing the downloads? - I did find gnokii in google, but it does not seem to support any LG stuff. Thanks Frank |
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#2 |
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Guest
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Re: Mandriva 2008 vs LG U830 phone
Frank Peelo wrote:
> LG U830 Google is your friend. Your device is on its modem profile. It shouldn't be. Have a look in your manual. If not, then, well, I have no solution. |
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#3 |
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Guest
Posts: n/a
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Re: Mandriva 2008 vs LG U830 phone
Frank Peelo wrote:
> LG U830 Google is your friend. Your device is on its modem profile. It shouldn't be. Have a look in your manual. If not, then, well, I have no solution. |
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#4 |
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Guest
Posts: n/a
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Re: Mandriva 2008 vs LG U830 phone
Frank Peelo wrote:
> LG U830 Google is your friend. Your device is on its modem profile. It shouldn't be. Have a look in your manual. If not, then, well, I have no solution. |
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#5 |
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Guest
Posts: n/a
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Re: Mandriva 2008 vs LG U830 phone
Frank Peelo wrote:
> LG U830 Google is your friend. Your device is on its modem profile. It shouldn't be. Have a look in your manual. If not, then, well, I have no solution. |
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#6 |
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Guest
Posts: n/a
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Re: Mandriva 2008 vs LG U830 phone
Frank Peelo wrote:
> LG U830 Google is your friend. Your device is on its modem profile. It shouldn't be. Have a look in your manual. If not, then, well, I have no solution. |
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#7 |
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Guest
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Re: Mandriva 2008 vs LG U830 phone [SOLUTION, of sorts]
Amrein-Marie Christophe wrote:
> Frank Peelo wrote: > > >> LG U830 > > > Google is your friend. Normally yes; but as described in the original post Google was not being any help with this. Found lots of matches, but no useful ones. > Your device is on its modem profile. It shouldn't be. > Have a look in your manual. The manual for the phone is useless. It does tell me that USB is a way to connect to the PC, but that's all it says on the subject. The Connectivity section says nothing about connecting with USB, or what can be done with it. We have been unable to find anything about modem profile in the menus of the phone. The shop which sold the thing didn't know anything about a modem profile either. Think we're barking up the wrong tree there. KMobileTools was able to connect to the phone over USB, but all I could see were a few SMS messages. Couldn't see any pictures or MP3 files at all. Left me thinking I might be better off having a copy of Windows somewhere. Then I got access to a Windows XP machine; installed the LG software on that, and it was no better there than under Crossover. Doesn't crash on XP; but it doesn't show the photos or MP3 files either. And the phone comes up as a modem there too. > If not, then, well, I have no solution. Fortunately, a colleague had an idea. It's not a perfect solution - it's slow, and required the purchase of extra hardware, but at least the phone can now be used. Got a bluetooth dongle in the nearest Maplin store. (No idea what model; the box had been nicked off the display.) Plugged it into my Mandriva box. The Bluetooth stuff that got installed with kMobileTools recognised it. I had googled for a recent compatibility list without success, but it looks like they're a standard part now or something. Plug & pray. I can send files to the phone with OBEX, and the phone can send photos back the same way. It's nowhere near as easy as copying files on or off a USB flash stick, but it will do. Frank |
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