W dniu 08.10.2015 o 14:00, Simon Fels pisze: > A tablet stays a tablet. Having a modem included doesn't make it a > phone. The Bluetooth device class is meant to stay static for one device > forever. No dynamic changes. It is your first point to find out what > kind of Bluetooth device you've found. > > Btw. that a tablet includes a GSM modem still doesn't say anything about > if it also allows you to do voice calls ... If we have a "phablet" > device then this needs to be categorized as a phone as it provides voice > call capabilities. See > https://www.bluetooth.org/en-us/specification/assigned-numbers/baseband > for some more details on the major and minor device classes we're > talking about here. Putting the device into the right major/minor class > is crucial as some car kits doesn't allow you to pair them only with > devices part of the phone device class... > > Also what would be the benefit of having an option for the user to > override this?
I think you just wrote what would be the benefit - some car kits only connect to phone devices. What if I wanted my 3G tablet (no voice, but VoIP still works!) to connect to the car? I'm not saying this should be an option in the UI, but I see no reason to go to special lengths to disallow the user overriding it. -- Michał Sawicz <michal.saw...@canonical.com> Canonical Ltd.
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