Allen Zhu wrote: >> > Timothy Murphy wrote: >> >> What exactly is kdebluetooth meant to do? >> >> As far as I can see it does nothing, >> >> either by clicking on the Kdebluetooth4 icon in f->Applications >> >> or by running kbluetooth4 . >> > >> > What Fedora version are you using? We have different versions of the >> > Bluetooth stack including kdebluetooth in Fedora 9 and 10. >> >> Sorry. >> I'm running standard Fedora-10, updated. >> I have a Bluetooth logo in my panel, from Kbluetooth4 (which is running). >> >> When I left-click on this icon it seems to do nothing. >> When I right-click on it I am offered the options >> Send File, Device Manager, Settings, About and Quit, >> none of when seem to do anything very useful. > http://bluetooth.kmobiletools.org/ > > http://kde-apps.org/content/show.php/kdebluetooth4?content=84761 > > It basically manages your Bluetooth Adapters, like in Gnome, they use: > > http://live.gnome.org/GnomeBluetooth and PhoneManager, built on > GNOMEBluetooth. > > Not to be rude, but have you tried the power of Google? Not to be equally rude, but have you actually tried kdebluetooth-0.3-1.fc10.i386 (the current version)? Or do you just know how it works? If so, can you tell me how you use it to establish a bluetooth connection? Neither of the documents you cite seems to me to explain this. As I mentioned, I did not install bluez-gnome because I wanted to see if and how KBluetooth4 works. -- Timothy Murphy e-mail: gayleard /at/ eircom.net tel: +353-86-2336090, +353-1-2842366 s-mail: School of Mathematics, Trinity College, Dublin 2, Ireland