![]() ![]() ![]() The time it was recognized as 4e3f was a surprise, and I had no access to the Asus from my openSUSE on that occasion. It took me a while to succeed, and as I attempted this multiple times, I had mixed results here, with the device being recognized as eitherīus 001 Device 005: ID 0b05:4e1f ASUSTek Computer, Inc.īus 001 Device 005: ID 0b05:4e3f ASUSTek Computer, Inc. ![]() I then switched ON my transformer, and I plugged in the USB cable. Its quite possible ‘chmod 775’ is superior (as that is what I have nominally read), but I wanted to give all ‘users’ write access, and not just a specific user from my nominal desktop login. I’ve read this works as the Asus Transformer can be treated as an MTP device when connecting via this USB cable.Īfter mtpfs was installed, I followed the method which is posted on many blogs and forum threads for other GNU/Linux distributions, which is to create the directory: According to the mtpfs web site MTPfs is a FUSE filesystem that supports reading and writing from any MTP device (as supported by libmtp). This male ‘USB’ end of the cable nominally plugs into the AC power adapter, and instead I plugged the USB end into my Desktop PC.īefore connecting any cables thou, on my openSUSE-11.4 PC’s operating system I installed mtpfs that is packaged by Packman Packagers. To interface the Transformer to my desktop PC, I used the USB/power cable that comes with the Transformer, which is a cable that plugs into the Transformer’s Tablet section output-jack for the ‘Dockingstation/keyboard’ on one end, and it has a male USB jack on the other end. The Asus Transformer is running Android 3.2.1 and my openSUSE-11.4 is running KDE-4.6.0. ![]() I successfully connected my Asus Transformer Tablet PC via a USB connection to my 64-bit openSUSE-11.4 PC (running KDE-4.6.0) to copy files to/from. ![]()
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