I spent an hour trying to get my Intel AX210 bluetooth working. It's a combined wifi/bluetooth card, built-in to the mobo in my case.
Changed kernels, changed drivers, web searched relentlessly. I could never get my headphones to work for more than a second or two and poorly so even then.
I was just about to give in when I glanced to the far left of my very large desk and eyeballed the external wifi antenna that came with my new mobo but I hadn't bothered to install. I had just read a comment to some other AX210 user that talked about "the antenna having only a single lead..." It seems that some users in the past had encountered a condition where they could only enable one or the other - wifi or bluetooth - but not both, and one of the common causes was a single lead antenna. My antenna had two threaded leads.
Then came the self-inflicted forehead slap. So yes, obviously connecting the antenna and all the dmesg errors went away and the headphones worked perfectly.
Sigh... It's highly annoying when at my age and level of experience I still make rookie mistakes.
Changed kernels, changed drivers, web searched relentlessly. I could never get my headphones to work for more than a second or two and poorly so even then.
I was just about to give in when I glanced to the far left of my very large desk and eyeballed the external wifi antenna that came with my new mobo but I hadn't bothered to install. I had just read a comment to some other AX210 user that talked about "the antenna having only a single lead..." It seems that some users in the past had encountered a condition where they could only enable one or the other - wifi or bluetooth - but not both, and one of the common causes was a single lead antenna. My antenna had two threaded leads.
Then came the self-inflicted forehead slap. So yes, obviously connecting the antenna and all the dmesg errors went away and the headphones worked perfectly.
Sigh... It's highly annoying when at my age and level of experience I still make rookie mistakes.
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