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2009-11-27
, 15:36
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Posts: 129 |
Thanked: 60 times |
Joined on Jul 2009
@ Castello d'Argile (BO)
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#2
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The Following User Says Thank You to aboaboit For This Useful Post: | ||
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2009-11-27
, 15:42
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Posts: 13 |
Thanked: 5 times |
Joined on Oct 2009
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#3
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2009-11-27
, 15:45
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Posts: 605 |
Thanked: 137 times |
Joined on Nov 2005
@ La Rochelle, France
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#4
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2009-11-27
, 15:53
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Posts: 13 |
Thanked: 5 times |
Joined on Oct 2009
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#5
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I suppose you could look at BlueProximity ...
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2009-11-27
, 16:05
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Posts: 1,012 |
Thanked: 817 times |
Joined on Jul 2007
@ France
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#6
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2009-11-27
, 16:12
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Posts: 15 |
Thanked: 48 times |
Joined on Nov 2009
@ United Kingdom
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#7
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You can simply do a bluetooth scan ... which will give you a list of device at promity with their mac address ... store this and compare.
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2009-11-27
, 16:12
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Posts: 605 |
Thanked: 137 times |
Joined on Nov 2005
@ La Rochelle, France
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#8
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2009-11-27
, 16:32
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Posts: 13 |
Thanked: 5 times |
Joined on Oct 2009
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#9
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You can simply do a bluetooth scan ... which will give you a list of device at promity with their mac address ... store this and compare.
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2009-11-27
, 16:34
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Posts: 15 |
Thanked: 48 times |
Joined on Nov 2009
@ United Kingdom
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#10
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I'm trying to use bluetooth to determine what devices are around me (context awareness). For this purpose I use bluez api in a way that I turn bt on, start device scanning and than I catch signals DeviceFound. The problem is that this signal is emitted only if devices are not paired. If for example I have my computer which has been paired with my phone I won't get signal that this device has been found.
The question is: how can I determine if known devices are in range (in a nice way ) - any ideas?
My first idea was to try to connect to every possible known device and catch errors but this is not the thing...
Thank you for your answers,
Best regards,
Skomialek