I downloaded old version 2.25 of bluez-utils, compiled and installed it, then
compiled and installed v. 3.36 over 2.25 to be able to use my MS
Bluetooth mouse.
Suse 11 64-bit distribution does not have a hidd daemon file included,
therefore its Bluetooth configurators only pretend to work.
I think that Suse 11 x64 distro developers were not able to
compile is also.
nased0 wrote:
> Suse 11 64-bit distribution does not have a hidd daemon file included,
> therefore its Bluetooth configurators only pretend to work.
I'd be interested in what you think is "only pretending to work". I don't want
to rule out a packaging flaw on my side, but at least for me it is working
fine with HID devices and rfcomm/dialup.
> I think that Suse 11 x64 distro developers were not able to
> compile is also.
I strongly object to that suspicion ;-)
It's not included on purpose, since it is obsoleted by input-service, as
Marcel already stated.
http://en.opensuse.org/Bluetooth might contain useful information to help you
set up your devices.
Have fun,
Stefan
--
Stefan Seyfried
R&D Team Mobile Devices | "Any ideas, John?"
SUSE LINUX Products GmbH, N?rnberg | "Well, surrounding them's out."
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Hi,
> I downloaded old version 2.25 of bluez-utils, compiled and installed it, then
> compiled and installed v. 3.36 over 2.25 to be able to use my MS
> Bluetooth mouse.
> Suse 11 64-bit distribution does not have a hidd daemon file included,
> therefore its Bluetooth configurators only pretend to work.
> I think that Suse 11 x64 distro developers were not able to
> compile is also.
I have no idea what you are talking about. The hidd compiles just fine
and the reason why SuSE not includes it is that the input service
supersedes hidd.
Regards
Marcel