Nope. A compact flash card in PCMCIA shows up as an IDE device. Here's my entries in /etc/fstab
# mount -t vfat /dev/hde1 /flash /dev/hde1 /mnt/flash vfat defaults,user,noauto 0 0 However, I have a dedicated Sony memorystick cardslot (this being a Sony Vaio, of course) that shows up as a SCSI device. # Sony Memory Stick /dev/sda1 /mnt/stick auto noauto,users,exec 0 0 A USB thumb drive shows up also as SCSI. # USB Thumb Drive /dev/sdb1 /mnt/thumb auto noauto,users,exec 0 0 I found the memorystick location "sda" by looking in the KDE Infocenter, since the card slot is always there. With the thumb drive, I looked in Infocenter after plugging in the thumb drive. Curt- On Wednesday 15 December 2004 09:26, Derek Broughton was heard to say: > On Wednesday 15 December 2004 04:10, Juraj Ziegler wrote: > > On my IBM Thinkpad X20, there is also a built-in CompactFlash > > reader. It is connected to the PCMCIA bus and the card is > > available as /dev/hda. > > Hda? That would normally be your primary IDE drive. /dev/sda, > perhaps? -- September 11th, 2001 The proudest day for gun control and central planning advocates in American history -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]