Open the file main.conf in your text editor of choice (notes/leafpad/etc) on your N900 and just edit the line (remove the network and input entries) and then save the file over the old one. Be warned to stay away from editing the file in for example Windows computer and then transfer it back, because some editor add extra linebreak characters that may break the functionality of the .conf file.
Leafpad is my choice, and can be found in repos. Just install it with HAM, FAPman or apt-get and run it in the x-terminal like
The N900 can provide Internet access to an Android Nexus 7 tablet (2012 / wifi only) via bluetooth pan.
On the tablet I used the app "EasyTether Pro". With this app, I have a check box for my paired bluetooth devices to "use as Internet connection". On m N900 I followed the bluetooth-pan setup from the wiki page.
(Note: Today 2014-11-15 this app is free of charge via amazon-app-shop)
Following the upgrade of Busybox Power to busybox-power_1.21.1power1, as described here, it is necessary to change all occurrences of /usr/bin/brctl in /etc/udev/rules.d/50-bnep.rules to /usr/sbin/brctl in the configuration described in Viqsi's post 258 in the present thread.
It works, I am even posting this with my Ubuntu laptop over the PAN connection.
Still no working internet connection to the Nexus 7(2013) running Cyanogen 12.1-20151029.
I can pair, I click the bluetooth box for internet connection, but no actual connection begins working, only infrastructure WiFI points work so far, and I don't know the console commands in Android to diagnose the network.
I would be happy if I could find ANY way to tether my Nexus to My N900, because the price paid for a tablet is lost for the most part, except when flying, if I am unable to use the tablet online when mobile.
@biketool
You can try also genwall to make a wifi hotspot (ad-hoc) or to make a pan connection and forward your internet to the client. Will add wifi ad-hoc to genwall help soon.
For ad-hoc and a crippled android this looks interesting.
I don't own an useless android device but maybe I can lend one to make a tutorial for forwarding internet to it.
Yea, android is not a normal linux, no familiar networking command except ping works, but Ubuntu Touch which is better on the normal shell commands is still too much an app desert.
I had hoped that since I couldn't get ad-hoc hotspot functioning with Ubuntu on the Nexus Cyanogen and F-Droid would get me the function I wanted.
Does genwall clash with the persistent PAN settings, ie. do I need to undo the changes?
What is the deal with crippled droid devices, is it the drivers, hardware, or what? I had thought that Cyanogen would do the job giving me a rooted device with full access.
Does genwall clash with the persistent PAN settings, ie. do I need to undo the changes?
At least you need to remove 50-bnep.rules file because genwall is working with bnep and you don't need a bridge.
In principle genwall do not change system files and should work with stock firmware + kernel power.
However genwall is highly configurable thats why it is maybe not so easy.
For bluetooth you need to edit /etc/bluetooth/main.conf for activating the bluetooth network which you already did.
What is the deal with crippled droid devices, is it the drivers, hardware, or what? I had thought that Cyanogen would do the job giving me a rooted device with full access.
I don't know so much about the software mods of android devices. But I guess the hardware is not limiting.
My own experience with android device were very bad, because they not supporting features which I use everyday, so they were useless for me and working with them and get things running were very time consuming compared to a personal computer and all my former smartphones.
However maybe I am thinking to much that a smartphone or tablet should behave like a computer.
But nowadays this is definitely not the case. They are mainly made for people who don't have a clue about pc's.
My own experience with android device were very bad, because they not supporting features which I use everyday, so they were useless for me and working with them and get things running were very time consuming compared to a personal computer and all my former smartphones.
However maybe I am thinking to much that a smartphone or tablet should behave like a computer.
But nowadays this is definitely not the case. They are mainly made for people who don't have a clue about pc's.
My feelings exactly, and my first experience was with a worthless unrooted Nook Android tablet. I have to either decide that it is possible to obtain a N900 like experience, light computer without a physical keyboard, with this tablet in Cyanogen or Ubuntu Touch or if I can accept that it is a $300 PDF viewer. Getting the tablet to tether with the N900 for net is key though.