Can you connect with any other non-Linux device? I have had cases where Linux gets confused - /etc/init.d/bluetooth restart is a good start but there are some posts here were users have had to stop bluetooth then delete the /var/lib/bluetooth/ma:ca:dd:re:ss directory (https://forum.espruino.com/conversations/368583/#comment16211236)
On the bluetooth adaptor in my Linux laptop I used to have to manually remove and re-add the btusb kernel module (or reboot) every month or so, but since updating to a newer Linux release that hasn't been an issue for me.
Gordon, you are saying that when I had HID turned on on the bangle, it may have auto paired with some bluetooth device in my house (other than my laptop or my phone)
No... just that when HID was on, any device that you then paired the Bangle with might have paired it with the OS. Once that is done, even after you disable HID the computer you connected to can keep trying to connect because it still thinks it's a HID device
Espruino is a JavaScript interpreter for low-power Microcontrollers. This site is both a support community for Espruino and a place to share what you are working on.
Can you connect with any other non-Linux device? I have had cases where Linux gets confused -
/etc/init.d/bluetooth restart
is a good start but there are some posts here were users have had to stop bluetooth then delete the/var/lib/bluetooth/ma:ca:dd:re:ss
directory (https://forum.espruino.com/conversations/368583/#comment16211236)On the bluetooth adaptor in my Linux laptop I used to have to manually remove and re-add the
btusb
kernel module (or reboot) every month or so, but since updating to a newer Linux release that hasn't been an issue for me.@crow_t_robot are you on Linux too?
No... just that when HID was on, any device that you then paired the Bangle with might have paired it with the OS. Once that is done, even after you disable HID the computer you connected to can keep trying to connect because it still thinks it's a HID device