Thanks. I actually have done this already. Not always sure what to make of 
the info. When I plug in my Keyspan, I do see entries being reported in 
this app. I see them both under the Linux and Android tabs. In Android I 
see /dev/bus/usb/002/002 on my Note N7000. I see Interfaces 0 and 1 each 
with 4 Endpoints. Of the 4 endpoints, there are 2 called interrupt and 2 
called bulk. I presume these are a set each for inbound and outbound. This 
device has only 1 serial port so not sure what there are 2 interfaces. On 
the Linux tab I see /sys/bus/usb/devices/2-1 and it is correctly identified 
by the app as a Keyspan USA-19H.

The thing that has me confused is trying to map all this only my experience 
on the Windows platform since I am an Android newbie. On Windows, these 
devices require the creation of a "virtual" serial port for a comm 
application to open. Is Linux/Android providing this automatically?

On Wednesday, January 16, 2013 2:39:39 AM UTC-8, al wrote:
>
> I would use something like the app "USB Device Info" (
> https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=aws.apps.usbDeviceEnumerator) 
> to see if it is accessible via the USB host api (
> http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/connectivity/usb/host.html)...
>
>
>

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