So here is the quick quick guide to doing it.
- Open a terminal
- Create a udev rules file for the Nexus 7 with it’s device id (18d1)
- sudo vim /etc/udev/rules.d/99-android.rules
- Paste the following contents into the, save and exit (ctrl+o, then ctrl+x):
- # Nexus 7
- SUBSYSTEM=="usb", SYSFS{idVendor}=="18d1", MODE="0666"
- Make the file executable (gotta love the security on Linux)
- sudo chmod +x /etc/udev/rules.d/99-android.rules
- Install the mtp libraries from the repos
- sudo apt-get install libmtp-common libmtp-runtime libmtp9 mtpfs mtp-tools
- Create a mount point for the Nexus 7 and make it accessable to all users
- sudo mkdir /media/nexus7
- sudo chmod 755 /media/nexus7
- Finally plug your Nexus 7 into an empty USB slot on your comptuer and run the following command on the terminal:
- sudo mtpfs -o allow_other /media/nexus7
- In a few seconds, the tablet should appear mounted as an external drive on your file browser.
- Note that these steps are applicable to all Debian based systems including Linux Mint
- When you are done moving files, unmount the mounted folder before unplugging the device.
- sudo umount /media/nexus7
5 comments:
thanks for sharing..徵信.
I don't realize how you know all this thing but thanks a lot for share
I was so sure this would work but I got the following =(
Unable to open ~/.mtpz-data for reading, MTPZ disabled.Listing raw device(s)
No raw devices found.
running kubuntu 13.04 on a sony vaio vpcel22fx
Thanks a lot for sharing this
You rock! Worked perfect in Ubuntu 12.04
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