Uli Plank wrote:Move it behind a wall or two.
Tried that. Didn’t work sufficiently reliable. The critter is extremely noisy in the “Bluetooth band”, it seems
Current solution: Placed in a “sealed” aluminium box. This Blocks all signals. But, really, this is a first, and I’ve used maybe up to a hundred different Bluetooth devices since it became available, and never ever experienced side effects - never even expected a “system jammer” as strong, as exhibited by the Speed Editor.
The real problem is, that the speed editor actually is capable of disturbing normal Bluetooth functionality, when paired and automatically connected (the problem with “spluttering” Bluetooth handling exists, whether DaVinci Resolve Studio is installed or - now - deinstalled), when Windows Remote Desktop is NOT active.
The Speed Editor is actually the source of significant Bluetooth instability in Windows 21H2, forcing the system to “rescan” devices at frequent intervals (Bluetooth visibly “blinks” on/off in the right pane, where you can activate Bluetooth, WiFi etc. at will).
As soon as the device is “unpaired” (removed) and the driver for the DaVinci Keyboard also deleted from “Devices and Printers”, the “flickering” vanishes, but the device still retries connecting to all devices in the vicinity and constantly (I have three active computers at my desk), but luckily without success.
This extremely aggressive behavior may affect Bluetooth functionality/reliability in general, where some machines are affected more than others.
It took me a looong time to pinpoint the culprit. I never suspected a device, I barely had used, to have this dramatically detrimental effect on Bluetooth functionality on a modern computer.
A simple on-off switch, would do wonders here. Don’t you think. You know: Sound engineering - or the use of batteries, that can be removed
Regards