Hi Dave,
> > I have one of these and I played with it. They use HID over Bluetooth as
> > protocol, but all reports are vendor specific. So you need a specific
> > driver to make something useful out of these events.
>
> It really shouldn't be hard to reverse engineer this right?
> Just press a b
From: Marcel Holtmann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Wed, 24 Jan 2007 08:38:53 +0100
> I have one of these and I played with it. They use HID over Bluetooth as
> protocol, but all reports are vendor specific. So you need a specific
> driver to make something useful out of these events.
It really shoul
Hi Dave,
> BTW, do you know if anyone has successfully used the Linux
> Bluetooth stack to communicate with the Nintendo Wii
> controllers? I am under the impression that they speak
> bluetooth. :)
I have one of these and I played with it. They use HID over Bluetooth as
protocol, but all reports
From: Marcel Holtmann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Mon, 22 Jan 2007 22:42:14 +0100
> Hi Dave,
>
> here are two additional fixes for the Bluetooth subsystem that should go
> in before the final 2.6.20 release. It was possible that the well known
> PSM could be bound by anybody. That should not be pos
Hi Dave,
here are two additional fixes for the Bluetooth subsystem that should go
in before the final 2.6.20 release. It was possible that the well known
PSM could be bound by anybody. That should not be possible like TCP/IP
ports below 1024 are also restricted. The other one is a simple endian
fi