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Creative Zen X-Fi and Ubuntu Linux – Solution
I have now decided to totally abandon my windows installation and use Linux for everything. I was pretty much using Linux for everything already but there were a few apps that I still used windows for or simply hadn’t got around to trying out on Linux.
I have a projector hooked up for watching movies. I used to use windows XP for this but the windows driver for my Nvidia GT 9400 started to get really picky about giving me dual view, requiring reboots to get it to work properly. With the release of Jaunty and SOAS boot times, my windows XP partition was starting to look like a really unattractive solution. Its probably infected with conficker and god knows what else anyway.
Thankfully the Nvidia driver and admin software for Linux is actually really good. It needs to be launched as Sudo to work properly – simply edit the launcher and prepend gksudo before the command to give you a GUI sudo box. That’s the projector and dual view taken care of (note you need to enable Xineview or whatever its called to get a proper desktop stretching across both monitors.)
Now the last little thing is my Creative ZEN X-Fi 16GB mp3 player. I love that little box of tricks and don’t often feel the need to update the music on there as its got such a generous storage capacity. However I came to do it, plugged it in and it wasn’t picked up as a removable drive as I thought it might be. A quick search later and I discover a programme called gnomad2.
“Gnomad 2 is a GUI built on top of GTK/GNOME 2, id3lib and libnjb that
makes it possible to transfer tracks and files from/to a Creative
Nomad Jukebox (all brands). It is designed much like an ordinary
graphical FTP program.
You can find it in syntaptic package manager. Install this and also edit the command to gksudo and you should then be able to move your music around freely. Oh yeah it runs a damn site faster than the creative windows software – sweet
Windows already feels like a distant memory…
More…
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4 Comments
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note to get gnomad2 to allow you to transfer entire folders, you need to go to preferences and tick the box called “recurse into folders” or something like that. |
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GregE April 26th, 2009 |
Just a small point, you should not need to run it as superuser. On my Ubuntu machines it has run as a normal user for years. Try again without gksu and see what happens. It is great stuff, especially when compared to the buggy bloat that is supplied to run on Windows. |
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I don’t have gnomad with my new 9.04 which I loaded afresh (formatted the disks) with the Release Candidate. When I was thinking of loading the software I noticed a Creative Zen folder on my desktop and low and behold, it was my Zens internal folders. When I load up a new version of Linux – I never back up the dot files as I want a fresh install. However, I do make sure that everything I use is on and attached to the computer. Perhaos that is why it worked “out of the box”. However I have a duff folder with my music in. I cannot access inside it, although I can still play the music. Does anyone know how to hard reboot the Zen so that all data is zapped and I have a fresh machine? I’d appreciate it at ampers (at) gmail (dot) com. Ampers. |
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Peter Borgg May 2nd, 2009 |
After fresh install of Ubuntu 9.04 Jaunty my Creative Zen 4GB works like a charm without Gnomad2. It has been recognized automatically and an icon on Desktop appeared. Now I can browse the little thing like any other drive or storage. Yeahh!! |
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joseph
April 25th, 2009