![]() ![]() However, when I selected the directory from the Nokia's media card, which has the. You can work on files on your drive, not just from removeable media (DVD and CD). It appears to have the capability to convert mp3, aac and others. I haven't seen this problem in a Linux program in many years! How shocking to see it now! Also, there is no clear way to transcode a file. MoreAmp was screwed up in the font size, so words were overlapping and impossible to read. Ok, so I learned from the settings in a program that FAAC is the encoder and FAAD2 is the decoder. aac), jRipper, ogmrip, audiokonverter, encode2mpeg, MoreAmp, pacpl and shrip. Floola (iPod interface, which allows converting for iPod formats, including. FLOOLA AUDIO CONVERTER SOFTWARESo here are the programs for Linux I found easily by a search within the YAST Software Installation interface that provide access to them. ![]() The open source codecs that allow decoding/encoding of. Be careful! Even now I accidentally type. aac (the Nokia favored audio format) is a version of MP4, which itself is a version of MPEG. ogg, which really compresses the file, but the phone couldn't recognize the format. I moved a ringtone to my Media card and accessed it on my computer USB connection to the phone. A major one was left to be tackled: audio. ) Love them with maple syrup and a little butter!ĪUDIO Ok, those aspects were solved. Now my recipe for my mom's pancakes is on my phone. So I tried a plain text file and it worked fine. Neither of them would open on the Nokia though. WOW! The photos look as amazing as they do on the computer! This is working better than I expected. I transfered photos I had taken around the world onto my phone, set one as the wallpaper and set the folder as a Screensaver in Slideset mode. I hit upon one that autodetects the phone and it found my Nokia 6300 properly! Voila! There it was, connected. So I had to explore the phone software that comes with Linux. Next, I had to test access to my Contancts and SMS'. :-P The point is that it works and easily! There they were! All of the contents of the 128M card of the Nokia. POP! "127M removeable media" window appeared. Cool! I chose Data storage, hoping it would give me access to my folders and files of my Nokia on my HP. The Nokia told me I had a USB cable connected and asked me to "Select mode". I plugged it into my HP Pavilion zv6000 running SuSE Linux 10.3. The cable was a standard camera cable that cost about 30zł. ![]() Well, I got my Nokia hooked up to my laptop. ![]()
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