On Thu, Jun 16 2011, Mick wrote:
> On Thursday 16 Jun 2011 15:38:30 Allan Gottlieb wrote:
>> I have an htc incredible and want to use it to act as a modem for my
>> gentoo laptop.
>>
>> The htc manual says that I first must install htc sync.
>> When I go to the htc web site, I find that htc sync is only available
>> for ms windows.
>
> I wouldn't think that this is necessary unless you want to sync contacts,
> messages, etc. Opensync may work with that phone - but I do know for sure.
>
>
>> I believing others on this group have tethered their incredibles and I
>> wonder how. I see in google some attempts to use wine or other ms
>> windows emulators / virtualizers.
>>
>> I do not need to sync contacts/mail/calendar since I do that with
>> google.
>>
>> I haven't seen any howtos for tethering directly with gentoo.
>
> I don't have your phone to provide detailed instructions, but this is how I
> have tethered phones in the past to connect to the Internet using IrDA or
> Bluetooth.
thanks for the information. The forum post paul sent me too claims that
this is very easy with a usb connection. But to date, I haven't got it
working. Others definitely have so there is probably something wrong
with configuration (quite possible the kernel).
thanks again,
allan
================================================================
> 1. Establish a connection between your phone and the laptop. I assume you
> will use Bluetooth for this, so you will need to edit
> /etc/bluetooth/rfcomm.conf as follows:
>
> #
> # RFCOMM configuration file.
> #
>
> rfcomm0 {
> # # Automatically bind the device at startup
> # bind no;
> bind yes;
> # # Bluetooth address of the device
> # device 11:22:33:44:55:66;
> device XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:XX; <--your phone's b'tooth MAC address
> #
> # # RFCOMM channel for the connection
> # channel 1;
> #channel 1;
> # # Description of the connection
> # comment "Example Bluetooth device";
> comment "HTC Incredible"; <--your phone's name
> }
>
> To find the MAC address run hcitool with various parameters like, scan, dev,
> inq.
>
> Then create a ppp connection on your PC and point it to /dev/rfcomm0. First
> check though that the device is being created and if not, check the
> /etc/conf.d/bluetooth file, this is mine:
>
> # Bluetooth configuraton file
>
> # Bind rfcomm devices (allowed values are "true" and "false")
> RFCOMM_ENABLE=true
>
> # Config file for rfcomm
> RFCOMM_CONFIG="/etc/bluetooth/rfcomm.conf"
>
>
> The tricky part with the ppp connection is using the correct string for
> running the modem on the phone. On mine I dial up *99# and that activates
> GPRS on the phone. You may also need special initialisation commands for the
> phone's modem. Some googling on these specifics should get you there.
>
> Other than that enable bluetooth on both devices, establish a connection
> using
> bluetooth and entering a pin and then run ppp on your laptop. If all goes as
> expected you should be online.