Antix linux usb модем

How to connect and Android phone over USB.

I’ve been using AntiX for a few months and want to connect my phone to copy off photos. My previous Debian install worked fine after installing mtpfs and mtp-tools: plugging the phone in brought up an option box to open in the File Manager. The new one doesn’t, but I found an easy solution by switching the USB options on the phone to connect as a camera: this brings up a different option box to open in a File Manager or gThumb. Can anyone suggest an easy solution for AntiX?

:: Our crystal ball is broken.
As absolute minimum please inform the forum which version of antiX you are using when asking for help.
Often hardware info helps us to help you. In the antiX manu you should find, android device usb connect application. It works fine with most phones.
Depending on what you wish to do maybe setting up to automount USB devices may be an option, you can find
that setting in control center. Do not forget that has security implications.

:: Good point. I did say that I’ve been only been using it “for a few months”, but I agree that your advice is still valid. So thanks, I’ll try the USB app. Is this unique to AntiX or a general development?

:: The “android device usb connect application” was writing specially for antiX- but it should work in any Linux OS with the needed dependencies… It works, out of the box with antix Linux full, mouting the android device and opening the device’s contents in your default file manager. P.

:: I can’t find the app you’ve recommended, probably because I’ve moved to LXDE and have (regrettably) lost the swathe of links to on-disk help and info. Do you know the commandline invocation for it?

:: Great! Got it! Thanks to all. I’m very impressed with the unique “flavour” of Antix. It’s on my second machine, and I’m hoping to get more time with it once the present list of chores diminishes.

:: 52 midnight wrote:
once the present list of chores diminishes Changes the desktop and breaks functionality, asks for help without mentioning that fact.
did not bother to explore antiX before I guess, did not boot live to figure out out how
to fix a problem he created himself. Gave no clear information whatsoever in his post 1 and 2. Kind of user who wastes forum members time rather than figuring out his self created issues. Others have lives to live, work to do, something for which in this case no respect is shown.
you save your time by parasiting on others.

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:: We were all new once. And we all need to learn new ways of doing things. What Moddit is trying to communicate is that in this forum, and many/most others, it is considerate, and expected by the current members, when joining the forum and asking for help to not only take but also give. We are glad to help, but you need to give us something to work with. We ask that you share more information with us up front. And then contribute to the next new user in the future by reporting back to the forum the steps taken to the solution. Please give more information about your computer system. For instance, if you are not using the desktops as provided by the default antiX system we need to know that. If you are using a beta version, we need to know that. If you are using an older version, such as 17.4, we need to know that. And we need to know what you have done so far to troubleshoot on your own. Please give it up folks, don’t be secretive when asking for help. Seaken64

:: Hmm. Hadn’t expected to be the target of so much bile just by asking a simple question. The Linux community has certainly changed in the two decades since I entered it. > you need to give us something to work with. I’ve always been willing to provide what input and assistance I can. However, “geeks” generally tend to be not just proud of their tech knowledge and skills, but need to “prove” their superiority over any perceived competitor quite aggressively. After several early attempts to engage in useful discussions as a hardware engineer venturing into software territory that ended in belittlement and vilification, I soon decided to allow the “experts” their required sense of superiority and omniscience, and take part only as a lowly supplicant seeking wisdom from the divine, an attitude that has served me well and continues to this day. On a few occasions I’ve encountered ordinary humans on Lx forums who allow for the distinctive knowledge and experience developed by the disparate but related disciplines of software and hardware, and the discussions that ensued were both enlightening and entertaining. The rest of the time I’ve found it better to get in and out before I’m attacked by a “vastly superior being”. > Please give more information about your computer system. I’m quite happy to do so. However, AntiX is not my life, as pet distros often are for their developers. Don’t get me wrong: I’m exceedingly grateful for their efforts, and have always been in awe of what the FOSS community has accomplished. It’s undoubtedly one of – perhaps the greatest – social achievement in the history of technology, especially as it’s been done without the supposedly essential motivations of wealth, fame, and a note in the history books. From the perspective of developers, my difficulty can certainly be seen as “a problem he created himself”. The solution only required a commandline invocation instead of hours spent exploring a complex desktop and reading voluminous documentation, neither of which may have provided solutions even if prosecuted to the limit. Thanks to seaken64 and others for proving that there are humans in the AntiX developer community, but useful contributions, especially from those not expert in software, cannot come from a few terse exchanges in a forum thread: they inevitably require both common background knowledge and insightful, often protracted discussion. As to what “information about your computer system” I could, or could have provided that would have expedited discussion, none of what’s been mentioned was relevant. Even had I been using the original desktop, I would probably still have asked here, not just for a solution, but in the (usually vain) hope of finding a developer community with which I might form an amicable relationship, and to which eventually I might be able to make some useful contributions in a spirit of mutual cooperation and friendship. I’ve no desire to vow eternal allegiance to a mob demanding my obedience to their own conventions and whims – BE ONE OF US OR GET OUT! A pity.

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My sole initial interest in AntiX was because it was able to boot a new MiniPC where most other distros, including Debian, failed. I did considerable research on this and looked for a way to communicate the results to AntiX: that they had a uniquely successful hardware detection utility, and that I was in a position to provide a technically detailed summary if they were interested in recognizing and leveraging this advantage. However, there seemed no immediate interest, quite understandably since it’s a VERY niche area.

OTOH, even though I admire it technically and aesthetically, the AntiX installation and interface is completely useless to me since, as a hardware engineer, I need a highly cutomized setup that is best built from a plain vanilla foundation, NOT a highly configured one.

I then struck trouble with the keyboard, and a useful exchange ensued:

I’ve yet to make good on my offer to provide procedural documentation of my move to LXDE since the installation is not yet proven reliable, and pressure of work has prevented completion. Once I get back to it, I’d be pleased to present something useful to the AntiX community; but NOT if intermediate quick casual requests for simple info are met with the all-too-common “geek fits of abuse”.

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Инструкция по настройке мегафоновского модема для AntiX Linux 22

AntiX Linux 22 — это легковесная операционная система, основанная на Debian. Она может работать на слабых компьютерах с ограниченными ресурсами и предназначена для повседневного использования.

Мегафоновский модем — это мобильное устройство, которое используется для подключения к интернету через сотовую связь.

Настройка модема

Для того чтобы настроить мегафоновский модем на AntiX Linux 22, выполните следующие шаги:

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Шаг 1. Проверьте, что модем подключен и определен

Подключите модем к компьютеру через USB-порт. После этого выполните следующую команду в терминале:

Вы должны увидеть информацию о модеме в выводе команды. Если модем не определен, проверьте подключение и перезагрузите компьютер.

Шаг 2. Установите необходимые пакеты

Убедитесь, что пакет usb_modeswitch установлен на вашей системе. Если не установлен, выполните следующую команду:

sudo apt install usb-modeswitch 

Шаг 3. Запустите переключатель устройств

Выполните следующую команду в терминале:

sudo usb_modeswitch -v 12d1 -p 1f01 -M "55534243123456780000000000000011062000000100000000000000000000" 

Эта команда позволяет переключить режим модема на «общественный» и установить сетевое соединение с оператором.

Шаг 4. Проверьте соединение

Выполните следующую команду в терминале:

Вы должны увидеть информацию о новом сетевом интерфейсе, связанном с модемом. Если информация отображается, значит, вы успешно настроили модем.

Шаг 5. Подключитесь к интернету

Чтобы подключиться к интернету, выполните следующую команду в терминале:

Следуйте инструкциям на экране, введя необходимые данные о вашей сети и интернет-провайдере. Если все сделано правильно, вы успешно подключитесь к интернету через мегафоновский модем.

Вывод

Настройка мегафоновского модема для AntiX Linux 22 достаточно проста и может быть выполнена в несколько шагов. Следуя этой инструкции, вы сможете быстро настроить свою систему для работы с мобильным интернетом.

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