I hope to god that getting bluetooth services doesn't require all the manual
stuff that the documentation discusses (manually adding device nodes, etc.
etc). I'm assuming that it must provide some functionality or it wouldn't
be one of the default services loaded on boot. I checked out the
gnome-bluetooth stuff, doesn't seem to really do anyting useful. The
filesharing didn't seem to integrate with nautilus as I believe it was
intended.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Tony Nelson" <tonynelson@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Thursday, June 30, 2005 5:13 PM
Subject: Re: does the bluetooth support under fc4 actually provide any
services?
At 4:25 PM -0500 6/30/05, Matthew Lenz wrote:
...
If it does I can't find any documentation. Where do I even start? ...
I'm new to Linux, so I'm often in the same boat. If a simple Google
search
doesn't turn up anything right away, I sometimes try looking in yum and
rpm:
yum search <word>
This will list various packages (if you guessed a good word).
rpm -ql <pkgname>
This will list the files in a package. Look for man and doc. For
example:
yum search bluetooth
rpm -ql gnome-bluetooth
rpm -ql bluez-utils | grep man
____________________________________________________________________
TonyN.:' <mailto:tonynelson@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
' <http://www.georgeanelson.com/>
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