11-29-2015, 07:31 PM
(This post was last modified: 11-29-2015, 07:38 PM by technomancer.)
I have researched this somewhat for you, and from what I found it is a Andriod (fuze/fat32) and Ubuntu issue since 2008. The details on why are found by googling- "thunar preserve date stamp".
The best solution I found is to go to Terminal and type in- cp --preserve=timestamp /path/to/your/photos/* /path/to/the/destination/folder
I hope that helps, it isn't a best solution but creating a script that would do it for you is most likely the best option.
Check out this thread on the issue- http://forums.linuxmint.com/viewtopic.php?f=90&t=186472
The best solution I found is to go to Terminal and type in- cp --preserve=timestamp /path/to/your/photos/* /path/to/the/destination/folder
I hope that helps, it isn't a best solution but creating a script that would do it for you is most likely the best option.
Check out this thread on the issue- http://forums.linuxmint.com/viewtopic.php?f=90&t=186472
Member www.eff.org
*Hardware hacks are my speciality.
"forum posts should be like a skirt- long enough to cover the subject material, but short enough to keep things interesting"
--I am using/Running Linuxlite 2.8, Debian8 server, Ubuntu 14, Win7,Win10, MX15, LinuxMint kde.
--Xerox field service engineer, printer repairs,network analyst.
*Hardware hacks are my speciality.
"forum posts should be like a skirt- long enough to cover the subject material, but short enough to keep things interesting"
--I am using/Running Linuxlite 2.8, Debian8 server, Ubuntu 14, Win7,Win10, MX15, LinuxMint kde.
--Xerox field service engineer, printer repairs,network analyst.