Referring to tho posting of Josef Reidinger on the opensuse-factory list (Drop of yast2-sound; 25-01-2023), yast sound was the only way I had to get my bluetooth headphone working. Just touch the modules, and restart them, and the bluetooth device appeared in the list of sound devices (it was always found as a bluetooth device already). It was a little annoying, but since I reboot the machine only one in 2-3 weeks, it was not a big problem. So for me, it's a real pity yast-sound has gone. In the aforementioned discussion, pipewire was mentioned as a way to solve these things, at least, that was how understood it. So I looked for it in yast-software (hope that's not on the vanishing list 😁), to find a lot of pipewire was installed already. qpwgraph was not installed, so I installed it. But, is it that I am on pipewire now? pactl gives pactl info Server tekenreeks: /run/user/1000/pulse/native Bibliotheek protocolversie: 35 Server protocolversie: 35 Is Local: ja Cliënt-index: 37 Tegelgrootte: 65472 Gebruikersnaam: jogchum Hostnaam: linux-mkay Servernaam: pulseaudio Serverversie: 16.1 Standaard-bemonsteringsspecificatie: s16le 2ch 44100Hz Standaard-kanalenkaart: front-left,front-right Standaardafvoer: alsa_output.pci-0000_08_04.0.analog-stereo Standaardbron: alsa_input.pci-0000_08_04.0.analog-stereo Cookie: b708:1170 I started qpwgraph to find a nice looking bunch of loose hanging blocks, which you can relocate, without documentation of how to use it. Two of the blocks show my headphone, so that's progress I suppose. Looked for documentation of pipewire, to find a bunch of examples of programs I don't know what to do with. So how does a plain user enable a bluetooth headphone in this situation? Thins are getting rather complicated.... Any help appreciated! regards, Jogchum