Turn on bluetooth on login screen in Tumbleweed

After taking a very long break (over a decade) from running openSUSE on my person machine, I finally got Tumbleweed installed on a spare Intel NUC machine. If you’re one of my blog readers, expect to see more contents about SUSE/openSUSE later. Today, I’m going to share how I fix the issue with bluetooth keyboard/mouse not connected to this NUC at the login screen. I can’t remember I needed to do that my main machine running Fedora, but oh well, the fix is simple enough (if you know now)....

April 10, 2022 · 2 min · 230 words · kenno

Pairing Bluetooth Mouse on Gentoo

Just a few a days ago, I wrote a blog post about Pairing Bluetooth Mouse on Command Line on a Fedora laptop. So why do I need to write another post about doing the same thing on Gentoo? Well, as it turned out, I need a bit more than just turning on the bluetooth service and pairing the mouse. My Gentoo’s installation is very minimal, and I think this gives me an excuse to document on how I’d solve or get this working on Gentoo....

September 13, 2020 · 6 min · 1148 words · kenno

Pairing Bluetooth Mouse on Command Line

Ever since I’ve switched from Gnome to DWM on my main laptop, I have to perform most things on command line now. I know, right? :P Anyway, I need to pair a bluetooth mouse, Logi MX Anywhere 2S, with this Fedora laptop. I had a similar post a while back about connecting Bose QC35 to Fedora 29. So this is quite similar to that post. First, ensure that bluetooth.service is running:...

September 9, 2020 · 2 min · 323 words · kenno

Connect Bose QC35 to Fedora 29 Using i3

I have a very nice pair of headphones Bose QC35 and would like to connect it to my laptop running Fedora 29. It’s normally quite easy to pair up the headphones and the laptop when running Gnome or KDE as the desktop environment. But, how to do this from a minimal tiling windows manager such as i3? In this post, I’m going briefly show how one can do that. First ensure that the bluetooth service is running:...

March 18, 2019 · 2 min · 354 words · kenno