
In the coming days, I plan to document this arcane process a bit more clearly (though admittedly it didn’t ultimately take all that much fidgeting around to get it working — it turns out that when you assume features labeled “advanced” won’t work because even the basics aren’t working, you are sometimes wrong
), but I made a series of really happy discoveries today regarding my HTC Excalibur (the “T-Mobile Dash” in the United States) and my laptop running Ubuntu 8.04:
Right now, synce-gnomevfs doesn’t seem to work (the damned binaries don’t seem to understand where to find each other):
will@prometheus:~$ synce-in-computer-folder install
Failed to open input file: '${prefix}/share/synce/synce-in-computer-folder.sh'.
(if I can get this piece fixed, it will mean the file browser (Nautilus) will let me skim around in the phone’s filesystem which will help sidestep the command-line “one file at a time” thing)
Update: It’s fixed. Ubuntu 8.04’s GNOME uses an entirely different system in Nautilus for plugging in new devices; building the experimental gvfs support for synce fixed this whole thing and now I can browse files on my phone via Nautilus. File operations work too. Woohoo!
But this has got to just piss off somebody in Redmond, Washington something fierce — a Windows-based phone is cheerfully talking to and working with a “lowly” Linux box. Nyah, nyah! This was the last thing I “needed” Windows for (though the phone is capable of installing apps on its own, which made that issue much less itchy).