Quote:
Originally Posted by makkonen
It's possible that these SD errors come not from the formatting of the sd card, but from the partitioning. I've seen cards where instead of a primary partition, there's an extended partition with a logical partition in it. Linux doesn't know where to look to mount the logical partition on boot, so it fails. The solution is to repartition your sd card, but I'm not sure what tool does that. (Also, your issue might be something else. This is just one idea.)
Just a few lines before that, there should've been a line saying something like 'mmcblk0: p1' or 'mmcblk0: p1 < p5 >'. If it's the latter, this is the partitioning issue I mentioned. Again, this is just a guess, because I saw it a couple times, and I think it might be more widespread. What does yours say?
That's part of the puzzle (making sure you've got the right login information). But it seems that people fail to get data working even when they DO have the right login information.
It's like a damn Who's on First sketch in here.
Go to Settings -> Sound & Display -> [ ] Orientation and deselect it. The gsensor is too wonky at this point to be useful for that anyway.
The only way to get around astro being expired is to download the latest one from the market (I know, I know)... or maybe get lucky and find someone who's posted the most recent version somewhere other than the market.
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Line before that says:
Code:
[ 3.517578] mmc1: new high speed SD card at address 0002
[ 3.534820] mmcblk0:mmc1:002 00000 1993728KiB
[ 3.543151] mmcblk0: p1 <p5>
I think nueTools Storage Manager can repartition it.
I've been thinking about getting a new larger card anyways. I just got this little PNY 2gb card to flash roms.