On Mac, I had one touchbar button that connected/disconnected the headphones and another that handed them over to the phone or from the phone to the laptop. Plus commands in Alfred that did the same. And same on the phone in the dropdown menu.
That’s the kind of stuff why people buy macs. You could configure that on Linux, but you’d have to write Bash scripts.
And on Windows, if they implemented it, it would work 80% of the time.
I mean, I wrote bash scripts for this on Mac, and Automate workflows on the phone. The custom touchbar buttons were added with MTMR.
In Windows, I can’t connect/disconnect Bluetooth devices via PowerShell without a UAC dialog appearing (or whatever dialogs those are). And the free third-party option for control of devices from the command-line is a binary from a site last updated ten years ago or so.
This. Bind connect command to a keyboard shortcut. Live in peace.
Statements dreamed up by the utterly deranged
Joke’s on you, it was my keyboard that had connection issues! Wait, no. That joke was on me.
On Mac, I had one touchbar button that connected/disconnected the headphones and another that handed them over to the phone or from the phone to the laptop. Plus commands in Alfred that did the same. And same on the phone in the dropdown menu.
That’s the kind of stuff why people buy macs. You could configure that on Linux, but you’d have to write Bash scripts.
And on Windows, if they implemented it, it would work 80% of the time.
I mean, I wrote bash scripts for this on Mac, and Automate workflows on the phone. The custom touchbar buttons were added with MTMR.
In Windows, I can’t connect/disconnect Bluetooth devices via PowerShell without a UAC dialog appearing (or whatever dialogs those are). And the free third-party option for control of devices from the command-line is a binary from a site last updated ten years ago or so.