

find out where that location is mounted, e.g. mount the card as WebDAV in your favorite file browser (on my system: dav://192.168.0.111/) configure your router so it always assigns the same IP address to the card power-cycle the card, so it will connect to your router, just like any other device on the network

Network setup (assuming you have a wireless router): put the files you just backed up, back on the card (to restore wifi functionality) format card (from camera or from any other device)

make a backup copy of the files from the card, in particular: So, to save you from hours of fiddling, here's a short guide on how to get it working on Linux, to the point of being able to run "make install" - that is, to upload ML on it without any cables: Side note: a while ago g3gg0 got a Transcend wifi card, and he mentioned it's very slow, so I hoped this one would be better. + it has documentation, developer forum, Lua scripting, all sorts of bells and whistles (too bad the basics aren't working well.) + it has a nice logo with Toshiba printed on it formatting the card removes wifi functionality (!) some things just don't seem to work (such as internet passthrough, or manually enabling/disabling wifi) quite hard to set up (it took me about 3 hours from unpacking to being able to copy files on it) SLOW (1 minute for downloading a 18MB file.) As you can imagine, constantly swapping the card between camera and PC is not pleasant for any of the devices involved (card, card reader and card slot from the camera - they all suffer). I've just got this card hoping it will reduce wear and tear on my cards and card readers.
