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Actually, the problem is that the native IDE and the Web IDE don't share the settings. I had set it in the web IDE. I had also have to check
Set Current Time
in the native IDE. The reason I didn't realize that at first is that apparently, the PIXL remember the year from before so it wasn't obvious it wasn't updating the information. -
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I thought I'd followed the doc each time but ... well, it works for now and may true 2.xx at some point. I even got the IR sort of working and discovered I can turn on the date. Big thing I want to do is get Visual Studio Code working but getting errors trying to use the espruino module. But that's for another day.
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Native just shows the pixl and my serial port. I removed the battery and replaced it and then hit the button in 3 seconds but it still went green immediately. The web version doesn't even show a serial port. That serial port is associated with another device so is moot.
Since DFUTag isn't showing on my Android, and I don't see the red LED no matter what I do I think I'm going to have to assume the puck is no longer viable.
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When I got the pick and first flashed it everything seemed to work right and go smoothly. Not sure if the green light came on before my initial attempt to pair with the IDE (Chrome) but even then it paired with Windows desktop.
What's also strange is that the PIXL is readily pairable in Chrome but neither is showing up in the nRF Toolbox
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As noted, the Web IDE works fine and connects to the pixl but not the puck. The Windows IDE just gloms onto the first serial port it finds.
So I did try
<html> <head> </head> <body> <script src="https://www.puck-js.com/puck.js"></script> <button onclick="Puck.write('LED1.set();\n');">On!</button> <button onclick="Puck.write('LED1.reset();\n');">Off!</button> </body> </html>
(served from localhost) and it has the same problem -- finding the pixl but not the puck
as an FYI the puck is glowing green now that I replaced the battery. It appears to stay on and run down the battery.
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With the Pixl I had no problem connecting to both Windows and Chrome. Seems to be more of a protocol program.
I also notice that the Windows IDE seems to assume that any serious port must be the device but there isn't a serial port in the Windows device manager -- shouldn't it be using the Bluetooth native interface? I ran into a similar issue try ing to use Visual Studio Code.
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I updated my new puck via Andriod to 2.00. I then quickly paired it with Windows 10 just fine. Now I'm trying to use the IDE In Chrome 71 and Chrome says it can't find my BLE device. I removed it from Windows just to be safe and it still didn't show up. I could re-pair it with Windows.
Note that the puck is shining bright green.
How can I quickly debug this?
I agree that making the IDE cloud-dependent would be good but it would be nice to have a reconciliation option as I do with Visual Studio Code. In fact I'd really like to use VSC as my IDE but when I tried it appeared that the implementation wasn't complete.