Today Konstantin Svist did spake thusly:
Scott van Looy wrote:
Today Ed Greshko did spake thusly:
Karl Larsen wrote:
Hi and I have a Bluetooth device I wear in my ear and it talks to my
Cell Phone with no setup required. It's a LG cell phone and Motorola
Bluetooth but they work fine. I checked on this FC6 and it has at
System->preferances->More preferances a tag says Bluetooth but it is
nothing but a panel asking what it should do if it hears a transmitter.
Nothing poped up when I turned on my thing so I think it's not working.
Let's ask a very basic question.
What are you expecting to happen? What is the goal? Without knowing the
goal, and without knowing what "thing" you are turning on it would seem
hard
to determine what, if anything is wrong. It may well be not
working....but
what should it be doing....or what do you think it should be doing?
Usually, when I turn on my "thing" it works pretty good and all concerned
are satisfied....or at least they say they are.
There's 2 classes of bluetooth devices, bluetooth audio wireless devices
(hands free kits) are the latter class, which not all bluetooth dongles,
etc support. Plus, for bluetooth to work in fedora you need the appropriate
PC hardware
I'm pretty sure we're talking about the wireless devices, not dongles.
My bluetooth dongle (actuall built into my laptop) is recognized perfectly
well and works so far (transferring files to/from my cell phone).
Let's concentrate on a single one for now: bluetooth headphones (though I'm
sure there are lots more devices that can be improved). Another closely
related device is a bluetooth headset (headphone & microphone - the BT device
you would use with your cell phone)
It's easy to connect the headphones to FC6, but nothing happens after that.
I'd like to be able to actually hear music through them.
What I'm trying to say is that bluetooth headphones, bluetooth file
transfer, etc are a different bluetooth class to bluetooth headsets,
frinstance I can get bluetooth headphones to work with my Palm TX, but
headsets don't, this is due to them using a newer version of the bluetooth
standard (supports "headset profile" or A2DP). Most phones support it,
obviously, but not all computers do.
--
Scott van Looy - email:me@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx | web:www.ethosuk.org.uk
site:www.freakcity.net - the in place for outcasts since 2003
PGP Fingerprint: 7180 5543 C6C4 747B 7E74 802C 7CF9 E526 44D9 D4A7
-------------------------------------------
|/// /// /// /// WIDE LOAD /// /// /// ///|
-------------------------------------------
It's illegal in Wilbur, Washington, to ride an ugly horse.