Hello,
I bought a Dynamode bluetooth USB adapter in Ivory. It is Ultra
Compact Dynamode
bluetooth 2.0 adapter (it is the only one Ivory have). I inserted it into
a Fedora 11 x86_64 machine.
lsusb recognizes it as:
...
(Bus 002 Device 002: ID 0a12:0001 Cambridge Silicon Radio, Ltd
problem.
One more question whose answer is not clear to me:
How do I switch the PC bluetooth connection between hidden/visible?
--- Omer
--
We will only have peace with the Arabs when they love their children
more than they hate us.
daemon
without this "x" flag?
rgs,
Rami Rosen
On Wed, Jul 29, 2009 at 7:46 AM, Omer Zak wrote:
> On Tue, 2009-07-28 at 14:19 +0300, Nitzan Brumer wrote:
>> I bought the LVT-010 bluetooth dongle for my acer one. I use it with
>> Ubuntu 8.10 and it works great out of the bo
On Tue, 2009-07-28 at 14:19 +0300, Nitzan Brumer wrote:
> I bought the LVT-010 bluetooth dongle for my acer one. I use it with
> Ubuntu 8.10 and it works great out of the box. no problem there.
> http://www.bug.co.il/prodtxt.asp?id=6233&perur=1&t=10
Thanks also to Geoffrey Mendel
Hi,
You may find some info here about a problem with 64 bit linux machine
and CSR based bluetooth adapter:
(It talks about BT headset)
http://technomosh.blogspot.com/2009/07/why-reboot-why.html
Regards,
Rami Rosen
___
Linux-il mailing list
Linux-il
32 bit, Its an Atom cpu
On Tue, Jul 28, 2009 at 2:48 PM, Dan Shimshoni wrote:
> Hi,
> Just a little question:
> is this Acer a 64 bit machine ? or 32 bit machine ?
>
>
> 2009/7/28 Nitzan Brumer :
> > I bought the LVT-010 bluetooth dongle for my acer one. I use it with
Hi,
I use a Kingston one I bought without thinking about the drivers and it works
as promised
Thanks,
Noam Rathaus
Beyond Security
-Original Message-
From: Omer Zak
Date: Tue, 28 Jul 2009 13:55:45
To: linux-il
Subject: Attempt to buy a Linux-compatible Bluetooth dongle
I visited a
Hi,
Just a little question:
is this Acer a 64 bit machine ? or 32 bit machine ?
2009/7/28 Nitzan Brumer :
> I bought the LVT-010 bluetooth dongle for my acer one. I use it with Ubuntu
> 8.10 and it works great out of the box. no problem there.
> http://www.bug.co.il/prodtxt.asp?id=623
Acer one is a small netbook, yet I had no problems combining it with the
wifi while it was plugged into the netbook itself.
On Tue, Jul 28, 2009 at 2:39 PM, Geoffrey Mendelson <
geoffreymendel...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 2009/7/28 Nitzan Brumer :
> > I bought the LVT-010 bluetooth don
2009/7/28 Nitzan Brumer :
> I bought the LVT-010 bluetooth dongle for my acer one. I use it with Ubuntu
> 8.10 and it works great out of the box. no problem there.
Note that Bluetooth and WiFi use the same frequencies and can
interfere with each other. In order to use both on one laptop wit
I bought the LVT-010 bluetooth dongle for my acer one. I use it with Ubuntu
8.10 and it works great out of the box. no problem there.
http://www.bug.co.il/prodtxt.asp?id=6233&perur=1&t=10
2009/7/28 Hetz Ben Hamo
> Hi Omer,
> I think all of them will work. I bought mine which i
n Tue, Jul 28, 2009 at 1:55 PM, Omer Zak wrote:
> I visited a nearby computer shop, and asked which Bluetooth dongles do
> they have, and whether they are compatible with Linux.
>
> They have four models, which are mostly difficult to identify (typically
> made in China and with n
I visited a nearby computer shop, and asked which Bluetooth dongles do
they have, and whether they are compatible with Linux.
They have four models, which are mostly difficult to identify (typically
made in China and with no clear model number):
- BT-USB-P Dynamode
- GPT USB04
- HK-890/USB04B
:
http://i-nz.net/2008/09/18/nokia-e71-as-a-usb-or-bluetooth-3g-data-modem-on-linux/
On Mon, May 25, 2009 at 6:22 PM, Amichai Rotman wrote:
Sorry - no go...
Only Mass Storage mode works. Nothing happens on other modes.
I have a Nokia E71, which has a special USB mode - Connect PC to web
http://i-nz.net/2008/09/18/nokia-e71-as-a-usb-or-bluetooth-3g-data-modem-on-linux/
On Mon, May 25, 2009 at 6:22 PM, Amichai Rotman wrote:
> Sorry - no go...
>
> Only Mass Storage mode works. Nothing happens on other modes.
>
> I have a Nokia E71, which has a special USB mode - Co
go to the "mobile broadband" tab and edit your connection.
> phone: *99#
> username :
> password:
> APN: I don't remember if its internetg or uinternet but its one of thous.
>
>
>
>
>
>
> On Mon, May 25, 2009 at 4:59 PM, Amichai Rotman wrote:
>>
nnection.
phone: *99#
username :
password:
APN: I don't remember if its internetg or uinternet but its one of thous.
On Mon, May 25, 2009 at 4:59 PM, Amichai Rotman wrote:
> Thanks guys, for that.
>
> I agree it isn't a good idea to use the Bluetooth method...
>
> Can you
Thanks guys, for that.
I agree it isn't a good idea to use the Bluetooth method...
Can you tell me what do I have to do to make this work with the USB cable?
Thanks!
.::.
Amichai Rotman
UIN#: 6401746
Registered Linux User#: 201192
;
3. sudo gedit /etc/bluetooth/rfcomm.conf
create a new BT object:
rfcomm0 {
bind yes; device MAC_ADDRESS;
channel CHANNEL;
comment "nokia ppp";
}
well, thats the first steps, than you should try to connect to your nokia, I
think you should select
If I remember correctly, that method only works with USB cable, not
via Bluetooth. If you want to connect via bluetooth you will need to
pair your cellphone via command line tools (hcitool scan, rfcomm) and
use wvdial with your APN settings. If this works for you I can provide
details once I get
Hello all,
I have an Asus eeePC running Ubuntu Mobile Remix (9.04).
I'd like to be able to surf the Internet using my Nokia 71's GSM modem
over Bluetooth.
I have the Mobile Broadband tab in the Network preferences, and I add Orange.
What's the next step?
Any of you got this t
On Tue, Apr 29, 2008 at 1:47 PM, Hetz Ben Hamo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> After spending few hours with tons of docs, I found the following info:
>
> 1. 3G connection is different from WAP connection, as it requires
> different APN (Access Point Number). For WAP/GPRS, it's "internet"
>
On Tue, Apr 29, 2008 at 1:47 PM, Hetz Ben Hamo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> After spending few hours with tons of docs, I found the following info:
>
> 1. 3G connection is different from WAP connection, as it requires
> different APN (Access Point Number). For WAP/GPRS, it's "internet"
>
Hi,
After spending few hours with tons of docs, I found the following info:
1. 3G connection is different from WAP connection, as it requires
different APN (Access Point Number). For WAP/GPRS, it's "internet"
while for 3G/UMTS it's "uinternet" (with Orange, I don't know about
Cellcom).
2. Those w
> Are you sure there is a difference? As far as I understand, connection is
> exactly the same as far as the computer is concerned, and the details are
> handled by the modem/phone.
Interesting. I'll check this.
Thanks,
Hetz
--
Skepticism is the lazy person's default position.
my blog (hebrew)
w (although, I'm actually more
interested in adapting this to browse from my Palm, but that's OT).
> Hi,
>
> Does anyone knows a good way to connect using bluetooth and Nokia 3G
> phone to the net? I have a Nokia E61 and bluetooth dongle. I can
> connect using GPRS but
Hi,
Does anyone knows a good way to connect using bluetooth and Nokia 3G
phone to the net? I have a Nokia E61 and bluetooth dongle. I can
connect using GPRS but I'm looking for using UTMS connection (Orange).
Anyone?
Thanks,
Hetz
--
Skepticism is the lazy person's default positio
On Sun, 6 Apr 2008 09:57:12 +0300
"Hetz Ben Hamo" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi Geoff,
>
> There are few howto's for installing and using bluetooth devices under
> Linux. There is some GUI support both in KDE and in gnome. I don't
> know about GNOME gui
On Sun, 2008-04-06 at 09:43 +0300, Geoffrey S. Mendelson wrote:
> I have a cheap bluetooth USB dongle. It was made by ISSC and is
> called an ISSCBTM. Under Windows I get a nice bluetooth icon in
> my system tray, and a GUI to use it to discover nearby devices.
>
> Under Linux
Hi Geoff,
There are few howto's for installing and using bluetooth devices under
Linux. There is some GUI support both in KDE and in gnome. I don't
know about GNOME gui parts, but in KDE there's KDE Blue tooth
(http://bluetooth.kmobiletools.org/), so it really depends if your
d
I have a cheap bluetooth USB dongle. It was made by ISSC and is
called an ISSCBTM. Under Windows I get a nice bluetooth icon in
my system tray, and a GUI to use it to discover nearby devices.
Under Linux, I can't see a thing. Unfortunately the only actual
bluetooth peripheral I have at the m
On Mon, Mar 31, 2008 at 3:53 PM, Geoffrey S. Mendelson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> To me the best choice is via a Bluetooth phone. Then you send your message
> directly over your cellular phone network which reduces the number of
> hands in the process and your SP is legall
never use it
either, I come from an "SMS challenged" enviornment. :-)
To me the best choice is via a Bluetooth phone. Then you send your message
directly over your cellular phone network which reduces the number of
hands in the process and your SP is legally bound to some confidentiality.
On Mon, Mar 31, 2008 at 03:53:04PM +0300, Geoffrey S. Mendelson wrote:
> To me the best choice is via a Bluetooth phone. Then you send your message
> directly over your cellular phone network which reduces the number of
> hands in the process and your SP is legally bound to some confid
om an "SMS challenged" enviornment. :-)
To me the best choice is via a Bluetooth phone. Then you send your message
directly over your cellular phone network which reduces the number of
hands in the process and your SP is legally bound to some confidentiality.
My wife has a Nokia ce
On Feb 10, 2008 12:33 AM, Matan Ziv-Av <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Sat, 9 Feb 2008, Erez D wrote:
>
> > i want to make my linux laptop act as a bluetooth keyboard
> >
> > i tryed googling for it, but only found how to connect a bluetooth
> keyboard
> >
On Sat, 9 Feb 2008, Erez D wrote:
i want to make my linux laptop act as a bluetooth keyboard
i tryed googling for it, but only found how to connect a bluetooth keyboard
to linux.
anybody knows how (or where to look) ?
Here:
http://www.mulliner.org/bluetooth/xkbdbthid.php
--
Matan
On 09/02/2008, Noam Rathaus <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I don't think you will find something unless you look for a hack, you would
> need something to connect to the bluetooth library and send signals that
> bluetooth keyboards send.
>
> That is usual
Hi,
I don't think you will find something unless you look for a hack, you would
need something to connect to the bluetooth library and send signals that
bluetooth keyboards send.
That is usually not possible - as like in USB - they each have a
different "MAC" or identifier,
On 09/02/2008, Erez D <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> hi
>
> i want to make my linux laptop act as a bluetooth keyboard
>
> i tryed googling for it, but only found how to connect a bluetooth keyboard
> to linux.
>
> anybody knows how (or where to look) ?
>
>
>
hi
i want to make my linux laptop act as a bluetooth keyboard
i tryed googling for it, but only found how to connect a bluetooth keyboard
to linux.
anybody knows how (or where to look) ?
10x,
erez.
On 4/14/06, Ira Abramov <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> guess. I tested it to work excellently up to 17-20 metres with walls,
> talking on Skype with my Logitech BT earpiece (which is probably the
> real range limiter here) while walking around my front and back yards
> outside the house. fun!
Ooohhh
Quoting Ilya Konstantinov, from the post of Mon, 10 Apr:
>
> Can anyone recommend a device to add BlueTooth support to my PC (via a
> USB dongle, I guess -- are there any other popular options?) that's sold
I was going to recommend my LevelOne BT dongle, but first wanted to ma
On Tuesday, 11 בApril 2006 00:26, Shlomo Solomon wrote:
> BTW - a "cute" trick I learned recently - I downloaded a Telnet
> client (ptelnet) for the Palm and can now start a session over
> Bluetooth. It's handy when X occaisionally refuses to respond to the
> keyboard.
Billionton works fine on my Mandriva 2006 box. I use it to connect to my Palm
Zire 72. I paid about 110 shekels a few months ago - look for it on ZAP.
BTW - a "cute" trick I learned recently - I downloaded a Telnet client
(ptelnet) for the Palm and can now start a session over Bluet
Ilya Konstantinov wrote:
Hi,
Can anyone recommend a device to add BlueTooth support to my PC (via a
USB dongle, I guess -- are there any other popular options?) that's sold
in Israel? Naturally, decent Linux support is what's most important to me.
Even if the device you use
On Monday, 10 בApril 2006 13:03, Ilya Konstantinov wrote:
> Can anyone recommend a device to add BlueTooth support to my PC (via
> a USB dongle, I guess -- are there any other popular options?) that's
> sold in Israel?
I use a motorolla thingy. Its blue, slightly smaller then a US
Hi,
Can anyone recommend a device to add BlueTooth support to my PC (via a
USB dongle, I guess -- are there any other popular options?) that's sold
in Israel? Naturally, decent Linux support is what's most important to me.
Even if the device you use is nothing special, as long as i
I apologize for this completely off-topic post, but after GOOGLEing for over 2
hours for what I thought would be a trivial thing, I've given up. And I hope
some one on the list can help me.
I have a Palm Zire 72 and plan to buy a Bluetooth enabled GPRS phone (most
probably Motorola
As I write this, my Palm ZIRE 72 is happily hotsyncing to my LINUX box over
Bluetooth.
After reading all the replies on the list and gathering info on the Internet,
I can now say this is do-able. It wasn't completely without problems, but
it's now working perfectly. I can surf the I
th my phone (Nokia 6600) in Linux though I
haven't got Linux to dial up using the phone (which I had no problem
doing with windows). Also installation was zero-effort: install bluez
and kdebluetooth, start the services, plug in the dongle and up goes
the bluetooth icon on the systray.
I don&
I've used a bluetooth dongle from conceptronics (called CBT100U). It
works fine on linux, and I was able to transfer files to my phone, and
to my friend's thinkpad. There are problems with synchronization with my
phone, but that's the phone's old software's fault (it
the following is from the questions and answer page at the ministry of
communications:
http://www.moc.gov.il/moc/doa_iis.dll/Serve/item/English/1.1.98.10.html
class 2 and 3 bluetooth is approved, 100 milliwatt is awaiting approval.
-yair
On 7/17/05, Hetz Ben Hamo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
COM that mention the channel limitation.
Bluetooth and WiFi are different from the others in someways. The
frequencies that are in the forbidden channels are used heavily by the
IDF. 100mW signal will probably not interfere with their much more
powerfull equipment but if it does expect a not very
On Sunday 17 July 2005 13:42, Geoffrey S. Mendelson wrote:
> Sure, but wouldn't a USB cable be a better bet? A lot cheaper, no
> radiation, no signal to jam (2.4gHz cordless phones are notorious for
> this), no network to hack, etc.
I agree, but if you followed my previous thread, you'll know that
On Sunday 17 July 2005 13:34, Shlomo Solomon wrote:
>
> I don't want to start a war, but who's right, you or Geoffrey S. Mendelson
> who wrote that it's illegal?
>
> And if it is legal, I'm back to my original questions - mainly, can anyone
> recommend a dongle that is known to work in Israel.
>
I
eqs are open for BT devices, which, in turn, can reach 100M.
> I don't want to start a war, but who's right, you or Geoffrey S. Mendelson who
> wrote that it's illegal?
People, IT WAS ILLEGAL, up until few device importers showed Omri
Sharon some bluetooth devices, he got excited,
Hi,
> > > 1 - Is it worth trying?
>
> No.
And thats because ... ?
> > > 2 - Does anyone have hands-on experience?
>
> No. There are three "bands" that bluetooth uses. The first is for "local"
> communication such as between your headset
Every BT USB dongle
I've touched (so far two. of which one is the one Cellcom sells) worked
flawlessly under Linux. never had problems using BT.
My tip - get the
cheepest one. They're all the same.
Ez.
Shlomo Solomon wrote:
On Sunday 17 July 2005 13:27, Ez-Aton wrote:
The probl
the
transmitter an equal amount or use a long feedline that looses some of the
signal. Yet I have never seen any ads that mentioned this when they
sell gain antennas or any notes included with WiFi cards or hubs,
except from 3COM that mention the channel limitation.
Bluetooth and WiFi are different fr
On Sunday 17 July 2005 13:27, Ez-Aton wrote:
> The problem was not with the distance, but with the frequencies. BT used
> frequencies previously used by IDF, so it was illegal (and distance).
> Now these freqs are open for BT devices, which, in turn, can reach 100M.
I don't want to start a war, but
the 100M gets to be shorter than that.
Ez.
Shlomo Solomon wrote:
On Sunday 17 July 2005 10:31, Geoffrey S. Mendelson wrote:
No. There are three "bands" that bluetooth uses. The first is for "local"
communication such as between your headset and a phone on your
On Sunday 17 July 2005 10:31, Geoffrey S. Mendelson wrote:
> No. There are three "bands" that bluetooth uses. The first is for "local"
> communication such as between your headset and a phone on your belt.
> Range is about one meter. This band is legal in Israel.
>
On Sun, Jul 17, 2005 at 09:54:27AM +0300, Shlomo Solomon wrote:
> Sorry to be a NUDNIK, but I received no replies and I find it hard to believe
> that nobody on the list has used a bluetooth dongle. I know that any
> standards compliant dongle should work, but before I buy, I rea
Sorry to be a NUDNIK, but I received no replies and I find it hard to believe
that nobody on the list has used a bluetooth dongle. I know that any
standards compliant dongle should work, but before I buy, I really would
prefer some first hand info, especially concerning models available in
As I already wrote, I'm now able to Hotsync. However, I'm still interested in
answers to the following Bluetooth questions. BTW - as I understand it,
Bluetooth would also be useful for Internet connection and e-mail.
On Saturday 09 July 2005 21:31, Shlomo Solomon wrote:
> Bluetoo
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