OK, after messing around with it for an hour, I managed to figure out a way to fix this. This is just a hack until some things with nautilus and hal are fixed up, but you can try this:
Open up /etc/hal/fdi/policy/preferences.fdi and paste this in at the end (but before </deviceinfo>):
Of course, replace /media/Windows with the mount point. This won't work if you have multiple NTFS partitions, change the match element to match your device. Please let me know if this works :-)
OK, after messing around with it for an hour, I managed to figure out a way to fix this. This is just a hack until some things with nautilus and hal are fixed up, but you can try this:
Open up /etc/hal/ fdi/policy/ preferences. fdi and paste this in at the end (but before </deviceinfo>):
<device> is_mounted" type="bool" >true</ merge> mount_point" type="string" >/media/ Windows< /merge> policy. mount_filesyste m" type="strlist" >fuse</ merge> removable" type="bool" >false< /merge> >false< /merge>
<match key="volume.fstype" string="ntfs">
<merge key="volume.
<merge key="volume.
<merge key="volume.
<merge key="storage.
<merge key="volume.ignore" type="bool"
</match>
</device>
Of course, replace /media/Windows with the mount point. This won't work if you have multiple NTFS partitions, change the match element to match your device. Please let me know if this works :-)
Cheers, Samuel