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Software Hardware Linux

Raspbian Linux OS Gets Major Update, Adds Bluetooth Support to Pi 3 (betanews.com) 87

An anonymous reader writes: The Raspberry Pi 3 was launched with built-in chip for Bluetooth and Wi-Fi support, however, software support for Bluetooth was lacking until now. The drivers were there, but today's update to the Raspbian Linux distribution adds much-needed GUI tools to help you establish Bluetooth connections. Another cool addition is a new backup tool. There are other improvements as well including the mouse settings, and the ability to empty the wastebasket through right-clicking as seen below (yes, seriously). There is even a new shutdown dialog, something even casual users should notice.Official blog post here.
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Raspbian Linux OS Gets Major Update, Adds Bluetooth Support to Pi 3

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  • Right click empty of the wastebasket? And they say innovation is dead!
  • Wrong summary (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Kinwolf ( 945345 ) on Friday May 13, 2016 @01:12PM (#52106605)
    After reading the summary, Raspberry Pi 3 gets no update at all, it's Raspbian OS that gets the update.
    • by 110010001000 ( 697113 ) on Friday May 13, 2016 @01:18PM (#52106663) Homepage Journal
      Well this isn't a tech site so most people won't understand the distinction.
      • by Anonymous Coward

        Well this isn't a tech site so most people won't understand the distinction.

        Heâ(TM)s right you know.

      • by sh00z ( 206503 )

        After reading the summary, Raspberry Pi 3 gets no update at all, it's Raspbian OS that gets the update.

        Well this isn't a tech site so most people won't understand the distinction.

        It also doesn't "add Bluetooth support." Support was already there; it just added the capability to make Bluetooth settings in the GUI.

    • by harrkev ( 623093 )

      After reading the summary, Raspberry Pi 3 gets no update at all, it's Raspbian OS that gets the update.

      Uhhhh. The Raspberry Pi 2 did get an update -- it is called the Pi 3. If they update the Pi 3, they will call it the Pi 4.

      The Pi 3 is actually pretty new. I only heard about it in February.

      Do you expect hardware updates every three months?

      • by amiga3D ( 567632 )

        Actually they're supposed to have the new Pi Zero out now. It supposedly has some new feature but I haven't heard what.

        • by harrkev ( 623093 )

          The Pi 0 has been "out" for a while (although supplies are very limited, if you can find one in stock).

          It is essentially the processor on a board that looks kind of like a memory module. It is intended to be embedded into other things. All it has is HDMI, one USB port, and the micro-SD card slot. No networking at all.

          https://thepihut.com/products/... [thepihut.com]

          • The whole shtick with the Pi Zero is that it costs $5. But so few were made that they can only be found for $20, which defeats the purpose.
          • by amiga3D ( 567632 )

            Well it was out but they ran out and haven't made any in a while. Supposedly they added something to it when they restarted production but I don't know what the new feature is.

  • by birukun ( 145245 ) on Friday May 13, 2016 @01:25PM (#52106725)

    Been using Ubuntu Mate with Bluetooth for my keyboard since I got it months ago.

    In other 'news' - Windows 10 can be downloaded for free.......

  • Long explains the refreshingly simplistic "SD Card Copier".

    "Long"?

    Hey, editors, try reading what gets submitted to make sure context has not been lost.

  • The ODROID-C2 seems like a better machine.

    I still want a RTC. I like having computers that can operate without being attached to the internet's apron strings. I once had a near nightmare situation whereas the clock was wrong on a computer that was sync'ing files. Never again.

    I've been wanting a Raspberry Pi class device, but as much as I want one, I don't need one...I think.

    • If your clock is wrong while syncing files, I can only assume that you don't have the NTP daemon running, since you evidently had enough network connectivity to transfer large amounts of data.

      If you're completely off the net, I think there's a GPS add-on that will pull atomic time down from the satellites.

  • Look, I like Rasbian and have run it since my first Raspberry 2+ years ago. But I had unexpected grief with the RPi3 -- I have an RPi2 that was up and running for months (I use a lipstick charger for UPS) and it takes all sorts of USB wifi dongles automagically. So I figure no trouble for the 3.

    WRONG! No end of grief, nevermind the obscure pkg imports to wheezy and BRANCH=next kernel upgrades. Wifi would NOT work. Only when I did a fresh install of jessie was it seamless. This 73 MB apt-get didn't do

    • If you're using the same power supply, make sure it can supply 2.5 amps. The 3 uses more power than the 2.
      • by redelm ( 54142 )
        Yes, power matters. More for the BCM USB/eth[wifi/bt] than the CPU (I had one stable at 3.8V), one reason to prefer the A+ and now Zero unless you need the SMP/RAM.

        I did quite some experimentation to find a lipstick [18650 bat] charger that worked as UPS. Cables also matter--I use short and fat with 0.4ohm loop loss. A cute little LED voltage readout wired to the GPIO shows 4.80V at idle, 4.72 when loaded. But when new software (non-crippleware) fixes a problem, then how can you say it was hardware fault?

        • But when new software (non-crippleware) fixes a problem, then how can you say it was hardware fault?

          With software, a prior version may have put load on the CPU that was optimized away by a better algorithm. I'd try a benchmark with the same code on both 2 and 3, computing pi or something, and see what happens with the power. (They will both throttle the CPU if if it gets too hot, so use a heat sink.)

  • If a wpa_supplicant.conf file is placed into the /boot/ directory, this will be moved to the /etc/wpa_supplicant/ directory the next time the system is booted, overwriting the network settings; this allows a Wifi configuration to be preloaded onto a card from a Windows or other machine that can only see the boot partition.

    For people running Windows, there is no /boot/ directory, it's the root of the microSD card. That would have been useful to state.

    Secondly it's a shame this isn't documented in a file on t

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