Patrick Shanahan írta:
* Patrick Shanahan
[10-03-14 14:46]: * Istvan Gabor
[10-03-14 12:21]: I have an sdcard used in a digital camera. Photos were taken in February. I want to copy the files from there to my openSUSE 12.2 desktop computer. I also want the files to have local time stamps corresponding to the original time stamp on the vfat filesystem. For example if the picture was taken (according to creation time in the file's metainfo) at 10:30, I want 10:30 to be the file's time stamp after mounting the sdcard. Currently the file's time stamp is 09:30 if I don't use tz option for the mount command. If I use tz=UTC option the file's time stamp is 11:30. Neither of these is correct. I tried yo use other values for tz, utz=CET, tz=UTC+1 etc but they were not accepted. It is really important to have the correct time stamps, so how can I?
your chosen email client does *not* wrap lines :^(
Yes, unfortunately. This is the webmail client offered by the mail box provider. I don't know how I can fix it. I guess only the administrator can something. In would write to him if I knew what I should exactly complain about.
exiv2 -T ./*.{nef,jpg}
This is a valid workaround. Thanks. Naturally it can be used with files which have exif data, like photos made by digital cameras, but not with text files made on a windows machine.
Note that this changes the file time-stamp to match the exif creation date and does not make any automagick adjustments. If the date in your camera is correct, the file time-stamp will be correct. If you change time zones or from/to daylight saving time and do not *manually* change the camera setting, the files will contain incorrect exif data.
Of course if the camera clock is set incorrect both the exif time and file time stamp (the original one, not linux mounted) will be incorrect. But this has not to do anything with my problem. Thanks for the workaround. Istvan -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org