Planet of sound.
Mar. 22nd, 2006 12:33 amI spent this afternoon attempting to get
redcountess' Jabra BT250 Bluetooth headset to work with my laptop. I even downloaded and compiled btsco from source, but no go. I tried plugging the dongle into the G4, and it reliably crashed the system every time. I even downloaded 20 meg of drivers from D-Link for the Windows 98 virtual machine, and it could see the headset but wouldn't get or give sound. Finally,
arkady came in with her trashed old headset, which one earphone is broken on but which has a damn plug on it.
So after dinner, I went into the lounge and set to work with a microphone, an Ogg someone had emailed me this morning and my first ever attempt to use Audacity knowing what I wanted to do even though I'd no idea how to do it and certainly wasn't going to read any help file. Two hours later: the result. Ogg Vorbis file (how to play these), 395KB. Announcer played by me, other voice by Chris French. Admire. Arkady laughed out loud first she heard it, so it's good enough. Expect more of these.
I have phone job interviews Wednesday morning and Thursday afternoon. So far so good.
(no subject)
Date: 2006-03-22 01:12 am (UTC)Does your Mac have Bluetooth built in? If so, does that see the headset without a dongle?
(no subject)
Date: 2006-03-22 06:51 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2006-03-22 12:44 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2006-03-22 01:17 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2006-03-22 04:33 pm (UTC)On a PC, it's a function of the Bluetooth stack -- and what Bluetooth profiles are supported by that stack. For example, Windows XP has a built-in Microsoft Bluetooth stack that supports only basic profiles, like SPP, PAN, OBEX, and HCRP. Third party vendors -- like Widcomm, Bluesoleil, and Toshiba -- depending upon the stack version, offer more full featured Bluetooth stacks that support a more extensive collection of Bluetooth profiles including HS(headset), HF, A2DP(stereo audio), AVRC, etc.
Particularly annoying is the fact that 3rd party stacks are licensed and sold only with hardware -- so unless your Bluetooth hardware comes bundled with the version of a stack with the features you want/need, you are out of luck (without getting a hacked version). Essentially, this amounts to the equivalent of, say, if a given FTP program would only work with a given NIC and to buy the FTP program you want, you have to buy a particular NIC to get it.
I've run USB Bluetooth dongles and various Bluetooth stacks fine in virtual machines. However, if your environment doesn't include the proper Bluetooth hardware and software to support a Headset device and profile, your OS won't get additional Bluetooth audio devices. Also, once you have the additional Bluetooth audio devices, of course, you also have to configure the audio setting of your application to use the Bluetooth audio for input/recording and playback.
(no subject)
Date: 2006-03-22 09:10 am (UTC)Good luck!