Erik Jakobsen
No I do not. But have just tested it from the root Kde, and here it worked ok.
What's the output of "ls -l /dev/scd0" and "id -a"?
eurit:~ # ls -l /dev/scd0 brw-r----- 1 root disk 11, 0 Sep 9 22:24 /dev/scd0 eurit:~ # ls -l /dev/sr0 brw-r----- 1 root disk 11, 0 Sep 9 22:24 /dev/sr0 eurit:~ # ls -l /dev/sr1 brw-r----- 1 root disk 11, 1 Sep 9 22:24 /dev/sr1
You didn't get the point. If I use my account in KDE then I become the owner of the /dev/scd0 file and therefore I can access the device. If you log in as root in KDE and do the listing then no one can see where the problem is since root is the owner of /dev/scd0 and it works OK for root. The command "id -a" lists groups which the user belongs to. One of them should be "audio" but I don't know how important it is. -- Alexandr.Malusek@imv.liu.se