Control your Linux PC from your mobile phone with Amora
Standing next to your laptop to control the slides during a presentation is not cool. Nowadays everyone uses a presentation device or their laptop's remote controller, but a presentation device can be expensive, few laptops come with a remote controller, and for those that do, Linux compatibility may be an issue. The Amora project turns your Symbian mobile phone into a Linux presentation device using Bluetooth.
Amora comes with two applications: a server for your Linux machine and a client for your phone. Server installation is a straightforward configure-make operation detailed on the project's wiki.
Amora uses Python for Series 60 for its client application, which means it runs only on Symbian Series 60 phones. To install the client application, you first need to have Python for S60 installed on your mobile phone (instructions here). On your mobile phone's memory card (usually called drive E:\) locate or create a directory called Python. Extract the contents of the Amora client package you downloaded into that directory. The file presenter.py should be placed in the Python directory.
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