cheers,
-m
--
Mauricio Freitas, Microsoft MVP Mobile Devices
Bluetooth guides: http://www.geekzone.co.nz/content.asp?contentid=449
Performance Centre (Pocket PC reviews):
http://www.geekzone.co.nz/content.asp?ContentId=2028
Handango discount: http://www.geekzone.co.nz/handango_code.asp
"martin f. krafft" <alt.cellula...@usenet.madduck.net> wrote in
message news:slrncfvbv5....@diamond.madduck.net...
So the P900 can't do it anymore?
I personally don't understand what you are asking,
You want to sync your mobile address/cal/whatnot with some remote system ie. a system that
is not in your personal space [10metres].
If you don't want to use gprs or gsm etc.. than how else do you expect to communicate with
remote systems. You are aware that Bluetooth is limited in range to about 10 metres and is
designed for cable replacement for local systems. (headsets/pda/phone/laptop)
The only option is to connect via a Lan Access Point but is this a feature of any BT
phones, being that they are DCE kit themselves?
Mauricio, maybe you can help me understand, what exactly did the p800 do that the p900
does not, with respect to martins original post.
:)
thanks
Rob
Sorry for not being clear.
> You want to sync your mobile address/cal/whatnot with some remote
> system ie. a system that is not in your personal space [10metres].
yeah, but i want to use my workstation as a proxy, with PAN or DUN.
Thus, the cellphone tunnels IP requests (such as HTTP) through
Bluetooth (L2CAP) and the workstation then forwards them onto the
ethernet.
> The only option is to connect via a Lan Access Point but is this
> a feature of any BT phones, being that they are DCE kit
> themselves?
I know I can connect a computer to the Internet via the BT phone.
But can I connect the phone to the Internet via a computer?
-m
To connect you simply install the Sony Ericsson software on your computer
and connect the phone (via USB or Bluetooth). The mRouter will act as a
proxy. AFAIK the P900 had this disabled, like the Nokia 6600. As you
mentioned before, most probably some operator complained about losing
revenue.
Apple's iSync software works via the mRouter technique. If you poke
around, you can find the executable that is used, and run it yourself.
It works with the P800 and the P900; I'm able to ping my P900 as we
speak.
won't this require me to be on OS X?
also, the 6230 does not seem to be supported.
Being able to ping the P900 is good. Are you able, once connected, initiate
a connection FROM the P900. For example, if you start Opera, can you browse
a site via this connection, not GPRS?
Yes, Opera works via Bluetooth. I have set up IP masqerading and used
that for P900 browsing. It's _possible_ that they may have broken this
in the newest firmware version or something - I'm on O2 Germany, so
the firmware is slightly older.
Interestingly, the P900 dropped the ability to select IPv6 in the
network dialogs. My P800 could be configured to have a static IPv6
address and nameserver; the P900 only lets you configure IPv4 ones.
I'm pretty sure nobody has ever used that feature, but I was
disappointed to see it go away.
How did the Nokia 6600 block bluetooth browsing? Is it possible to
establish a TCP connection to the computer running mRouter, but just
not use it as a router? Or, perhaps, did they merely not add that
computer as a router? Perhaps if you use Symbian OS calls to set up
the desktop as a default router, it'll work...
Would you have further references on that? I don't even know how to
approach this...
-m
http://www.cs.helsinki.fi/u/mraento/symbian/bt-ap.html
The routing tables are different. You can only connect to the computer
at the other end of the bluetooth link, rather than using it as a
router to get on the Internet. Using this guy's useful little app, you
can fix that.