On Thursday 25 September 2008 20:16:47 Brad Midgley wrote: > Daniel > > A few specialized bluetooth adapters have a2dp encoding/decoding that > executes on-chip. These are typically embedded in a headset or a > transmitter dongle. FR does not use one of these chips, so it has to > happen on the cpu.
That's too bad :) > There are a few bt headphones that have mp3 decoders on board and > there's been some work to make the gstreamer plugin take advantage of > it. That would sidestep the issue nicely by sending the raw mp3 > straight to the headphones if it were worked out completely. > > Brad Neat :) Is there a command I can use to determine if my headphones have that feature? Do you know if bluetooth-alsa supports this, and/or is capable of supporting it? > On Thu, Sep 25, 2008 at 3:31 PM, Daniel Benoy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > From what I've read, if you use a bluetooth headset, the sound and the > > bluetooth will communicate directly with eachother, and you need only alter > > the alsa mixer settings to move the sound from one to the other. > > > > Is it possible to do the same thing with A2DP? At present, I'm enjoying > > listening to podcasts with my A2DP headphones and my freerunner, but if > > ever I use the CPU for anything serious the sound gets really choppy. It'd > > be nice if there was some hardware solution. > > > > -- > > Daniel Benoy > > http://daniel.benoy.name > > > > _______________________________________________ > > support mailing list > > [email protected] > > https://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/support > > > > > -- Daniel Benoy http://daniel.benoy.name _______________________________________________ support mailing list [email protected] https://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/support
