Sd Card Serial Number Windows Xp3
1 USB 2.0 client; 1 Wi-Fi 802.11b/g/n, dual band wifi 2.4/5Ghz, BLE,SD card slot. Maximum number of copies. Windows XP SP3 or higher (32-bit only): any Intel Pentium II, Celeron or 233 MHz compatible processor, 850 MB available hard disk space, CD-ROM/DVD drive or Internet connection, USB port, Microsoft. Sign in to vote. I am running o/s: Windows XP Media Center Edition Service Pack 3 (build 2600). On an: Acer Aspire T180 R01-A2 System Serial Number: PTS54BCE2701. What do I need to download to be able to access the SD cards greater tan 2 GB? Friday, December 16, 2011 3:35 AM.
I have an application for my Hermes (Cingular 8525) that came on a 1-Gb micro-SD card. I have backed up the application in a RAR file and unRARed it to a larger (2-Gb) micro-SD card. When I try to run it, I get a hardware ID error.
It seems that there is a file that likely contains the CID identifier of the micro-SD card, which is unique to the card and is not affected by formatting. What I would like to know is if there is any application which will run on either my Hermes or my PC which will read out and display the CID identifier of an SD or micro-SD card.
Actually when I bought iGo, I asked for a 2Gb micro-Sd and they told me that they only supplied it on a 1Gb card. On top of that, they charged an extra amount because it was on a micro-SD card instead of a regular SD card. The price was really quite exorbitant - $300 including shipping just for the map of Israel. TomTom maps are $100 for all of North America (and only $50 if you do an annual upgrade). Primer Premier 6.2 Keygen.
However, for some insane reason, iGO is the only GPS map software for Israel - Garmin and TomTom don't have it. In looking over the supplied software from iGO, I noticed that there is one file called license.db which seems to contain the CID number of the card. I thought I would experiment with putting their app on a larger card and hacking that file to change the number to the CID of the larger card - except that I can't find any utility that will read out the CID. Hence my post. I can't experiment with this right now, but you might try popping the card into a USB reader attached to a laptop or PC. Then, on that machine, open a CMD (DOS) window, browse to the root of the card, and type DIR and press enter.
The resulting screen should show you a list of all the files in the root directory of the card. The second line in that list should tell you the 'Volume Serial Number'. Is THAT what you're looking for? If so, you should also be able to edit it, using a program like WinHex. Simply make the large (2GB) card have the same VSN as the one the software was delivered on.
Hope this helps, -pvs. Quote: Originally Posted by pvs I can't experiment with this right now, but you might try popping the card into a USB reader attached to a laptop or PC. Then, on that machine, open a CMD (DOS) window, browse to the root of the card, and type DIR and press enter. The resulting screen should show you a list of all the files in the root directory of the card. The second line in that list should tell you the 'Volume Serial Number'. Is THAT what you're looking for?
If so, you should also be able to edit it, using a program like WinHex. Simply make the large (2GB) card have the same VSN as the one the software was delivered on. Hope this helps, -pvs. I've got the CID in C# in Windows XP/Vista. No luck with Windows Mobile 2003 SE (I haven't got anything newer to try it with). You send IOCTL_SFFDISK_DEVICE_COMMAND with deviceIOControl.
Works only with SD cards plugged into a reader attached directly to the pci bus, it doesn't work with usb readers, you need admin rights for the call, it needs to be compiled for x86 instead of AnyCPU, it's flaky. My pocket pc experiments have ended in misery. I think the driver for the SD Bus Host must be programmed to deal with the calls or something.