While the chassis is metal, the lid doesn't have the rigidity of a premium laptop and there's also some flex to the keyboard deck. To be clear, I'm not saying this Inspiron has the same build quality as the MacBook or even Dell's own XPS 15 or 17. (The porthole vents are a nice touch, too.) 1 issue, when most bugs have been worked.HDMI 2.0, Thunderbolt 4.0 USB-C, USB 3.2 Gen 1 Type-A (x2), SD card reader, combo audio jackĪ full-size SD card is a rarity you get with the Inspiron 16 Plus. What are the possibilities that the next LTS distro will solve this issue with the desktop? It’s less than three months away, but I generally wait for the.
Running the DISK utility while flash drive is inserted returns a strange result: It is identified as a 30 GB Drive Generic USB SD Reader! Partition 1 is labeled as 29 GB exFAT with Unknown Partition Type, Contents Not Mounted.
Clicking on the unmount icon from right hand menu will produce the expected safe removal flag. Several minutes after selecting device from left-hand menu, an error screen pops up saying “Unable to access location”. The indicator light on reader comes on upon insertion, and device appears in the “Files” folder. What has changed since applying “sudo apt-get install exfat-fuse exfat-utils” to the desktop is no longer getting an error code. The same SD card is read just fine (identified as 64 GB) in Asus Laptop running Ubuntu 16.04 in both the native SD card reader, as well as the external reader used on the desktop above, so problem is not hardware, i.e. Same desktop USB3 port reads 64GB flash drives just fine. You can pull it out of the slot safely.ĭoes NOT work for my SanDisk ExtremePlus 64 GB card on Asus desktop running latest Ubuntu LTS: 18.04.4. Since it is not mounted, there is no chance of losing data. Step 1) Unplug the memory card that you were trying to access. Installing those drivers should fix the issue. The access issue pops up in Ubuntu because of not having the exFAT drivers.
This extended capacity is possible due to the introduction of a new file system, “exFAT,” in addition to long-living FAT, FAT32, and NTFS file systems. In recent years, memory cards have grown giant in memory capacity, with the modern ones as large as 64GB to 128GB capacity. It happens with certain memory cards that typically of larger capacity and formatted with the exFAT file system. The access issue doesn’t occur in all memory cards. Micro SD card not mounting error on Ubuntu exited with non-zero exit status 32:mount: /media/….: unknown filesystem type ‘exfat’. Did you end up with the below error while plugging the MicroSD card from the Camera to read the photos in it? The error might resemble as follows:Įrror mounting /dev/mmcblkop1 at /media/….