* Tom Massey ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:

> 
> Thanks for the suggestion. I've tried it that way as well, still doesn't
> work. Now find that kbluetoothd is popping up a window:
> 
Make sure that the pin-helper is executable. I think the debian scripts 
turn up as 644. You need 755 or 754.

The /etc/bluetooth/pin file should stay as 644.

If you like the kde way set /usr/lib/kdebluetooth/kbluepin to 755.

hth

N
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