On 07/27/2016 11:14 AM, Roger Wells wrote: > On 07/27/2016 08:16 AM, Ed Greshko wrote: >> >> >> On 07/26/16 23:56, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote: >>> On Tue, 2016-07-26 at 09:35 -0400, Roger Wells wrote: >>>> On 07/25/2016 05:55 PM, Ed Greshko wrote: >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> On 07/26/16 02:49, Roger Wells wrote: >>>>>> Something changed (although not fatally): >>>>>> I use Bluetooth speakers quite often. >>>>>> Back in F22 or so after pairing the device merely turning it on caused >>>>>> Fedora to connect to it. >>>>>> Several months ago, now on F23, (not sure when this problem appeared) >>>>>> that changed and after turning the speaker on, I have to go into >>>>>> Bluetooth Settings where the device appears as "Disconnected", select it >>>>>> and activate the "Connection" switch several times and it will >>>>>> eventually connect and be available for selection in the "Sound >>>>>> Settings" after which it works fine. >>>>>> Is there a path back? >>>>>> >>>>>> The setup is up to date Fedora 23 using Gnome 3.18.1-1.fc23.x86_64 >>>>>> TIA, >>>>> I use F24, a Bluetooth headset, and KDE. The GUI may be different but I think gnome >>>>> should have similar settings. >>>>> >>>>> On my settings for the headset I have "trusted" checked. Then there is another "tab" >>>>> called "Advanced Settings". There is a drop down box for "Accept Automatically" and I >>>>> have "Trusted Devices" selected. >>>>> >>>>> When I power on my headset it is connected automatically. >>>>> >>>> Thanks for responding. >>>> >>>> I don't see any Advanced Settings offer via the Gnome desktop and no >>>> mention of BT in the tweak tool. I'll hunt around. >>> To be clear: this was in KDE. I don't know what the equivalent Gnome >>> control is. >>> >> >> One thing that "confuses" me is that within the KDE settings there is, as I said, an >> "Accept Automatically" choice. But if you use bluetoothctl there doesn't appear to be an >> equivalent setting in the command line interface. >> >> I don't currently have GNOME installed on my system in order to check if my headset would >> connect automatically in that environment. >> > Here's progress: > Use bluetoothctl and set "trust" on for the speaker device. > After the next re-boot the device connected when powered on just like > before. (I just didn't know about the existence of bluetoothctl) > > Thanks, all > Well, not so good. It only did it once even though bluetoothctl still reports it as trusted. -- Roger Wells, P.E. leidos 221 Third St Newport, RI 02840 401-847-4210 (voice) 401-849-1585 (fax) roger.k.wells@xxxxxxxxxx -- users mailing list users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://lists.fedoraproject.org/admin/lists/users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Fedora Code of Conduct: http://fedoraproject.org/code-of-conduct Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines Have a question? Ask away: http://ask.fedoraproject.org