You have been subscribed to a public bug: My car is a bluetooth device. I can pair my phone with the car, and then playing music on the phone will use the car as a bluetooth headset and play the music through the car's speakers. The car can also display the name of the playing music on its screen (passed over Bluetooth) and skip to next and previous song via buttons on the steering wheel (with the next/previous command passed over Bluetooth).
An Ubuntu phone has the ability to play songs, including from web applications. At the moment, some music playing apps on Ubuntu can respond to a Bluetooth next/previous command from a paired Bluetooth headset. However, perhaps the Sound Menu could take control of all Bluetooth pairings. That way, all Bluetooth headset next/previous commands would be passed to the Sound Menu, and the Sound Menu would take care of passing those next/previous commands to the currently playing app; similarly, the Sound Menu knows the name of the currently playing song and could pass that information back over Bluetooth to the headset/car and then the car can display the name. If the Sound Menu handled this, then a music playing app on Ubuntu would merely need to integrate itself with the Sound Menu and would have Bluetooth headset support without any work in the app at all. This would also work with web apps (for example, Grooveshark's HTML5 app) which have Sound Menu integration, meaning that an Ubuntu phone would be able to use Grooveshark's HTML5 app and control it from a Bluetooth device while displaying the name of the playing song on that Bluetooth device, something no other platform can do. Note that this is useful beyond Bluetooth: other consumers of the currently-playing metadata or music control will find this useful. A phone welcome screen which shows the currently playing track and album art would automatically work if it talked to the Sound Menu. Media keys could be handled by the Sound Menu rather than every app individually. This may not be specifically a Sound Menu issue; probably most of the pieces to make this work in various places (the bluetooth stack, the sound menu, mpris) are in place, but it would be good if the feature were tested from end to end to ensure that all the pieces fit together and the feature worked. ProblemType: Bug DistroRelease: Ubuntu 12.10 Package: indicator-sound 12.10.1-0ubuntu1 ProcVersionSignature: Ubuntu 3.5.0-21.32-generic 3.5.7.1 Uname: Linux 3.5.0-21-generic x86_64 ApportVersion: 2.6.1-0ubuntu9 Architecture: amd64 CheckboxSubmission: 4d186c1dd89d3ba4cb89f5ee55713686 CheckboxSystem: bb422ca46d02494cdbc459927a98bc2f Date: Tue Jan 15 11:03:39 2013 EcryptfsInUse: Yes InstallationDate: Installed on 2011-12-11 (401 days ago) InstallationMedia: Ubuntu 12.04 LTS "Precise Pangolin" - Alpha amd64 (20111211) MarkForUpload: True SourcePackage: indicator-sound UpgradeStatus: Upgraded to quantal on 2012-10-20 (87 days ago) ** Affects: indicator-sound (Ubuntu) Importance: Wishlist Status: Confirmed ** Tags: amd64 apport-bug quantal running-unity -- Bluetooth devices are not able to control and display playing music from apps and web apps consistently https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1099972 You received this bug notification because you are a member of DX Packages, which is subscribed to indicator-sound in Ubuntu. -- Mailing list: https://launchpad.net/~dx-packages Post to : dx-packages@lists.launchpad.net Unsubscribe : https://launchpad.net/~dx-packages More help : https://help.launchpad.net/ListHelp