It sounds cool to do with Android, but why wouldn't you just use Linux or
even Windows to communicate with your bluetooth device?  They both support
all the mono and stereo headsets and are much easier to write scripts with
and to control the user interface, to log,  to modify the bluetooth stack if
necessary, etc.

I have used my bluetooth devices with Linux quite a bit to get the stereo
music out to the headset, to capture audio from the bt mic, to read the
buttons, to even output audio to a mono device.

I would much rather use a PC with Linux to trace through the message stream
and data stream while debugging/testing some external hardware in a
manufacturing environment.

Just my .02.


On Wed, Jul 29, 2009 at 5:51 PM, Diego Torres Milano <[email protected]>wrote:

>
>
>
> On Jul 28, 8:02 pm, Doug Wong <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > Any thoughts in this area would be greatly appreciated.
> Some time ago I develop "electron", a test framework based on
> "positron", having the ability to drive the tests from a desktop
> application using scripts or even through a web service. While this
> framework is no longer valid for newer versions of the SDK you can get
> the idea taking a look at
> http://dtmilano.blogspot.com/search/label/electron.
> >
>

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