H. S. wrote:

Apparently, _Mike Chandler_, on 04/15/04 10:09,typed:

Now, using Debian testing, with kernel 2.4.25-1-386, have installed gphoto, (and the front end gtkam).
So I run gtkam and it will detect my camera, however there is an error:


Could not initialize camera.

If I try and use kde control center >peripherals >digital camera:

Unable to initialize camera. Check your port settings and camera connectivity and try again.

My USB printer/scanner and USB mouse work fine.
I have searched, and searched, and the best I can come up with is USB permissions, or needing SCSI emulation.


I know this can work, because it works in Mandrake.
Any ideas are appreciated.
Thanks.




I am running testing too (2.4.24-1-868), but I have gphoto2, not gphoto, and I can grab pictures from a Canon A300 quite easily:
$> dpkg -l gphoto2 gtkam
Desired=Unknown/Install/Remove/Purge/Hold
| Status=Not/Installed/Config-files/Unpacked/Failed-config/Half-installed
|/ Err?=(none)/Hold/Reinst-required/X=both-problems (Status,Err: uppercase=bad)
||/ Name Version Description
+++-=========-=========-======================================================


ii  gphoto2   2.1.4-2   The gphoto2 digital camera command-line client
ii  gtk       0.1.2-2   GTK+ application for digital still cameras


So I guess you should try installing gphoto2 and try again. Should work.


GL,
->HS

try usbmgr and usbview (debian) a try and the gphoto2 lib's

maybe.... it works it did with me.

you never know you never can tell...

g.l.

steef


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