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Wireless Networking

Stadia Controllers Could Become E-Waste Unless Google Issues Bluetooth Update (arstechnica.com) 51

With Stadia coming to an abrupt halt, gamers want Google to issue a software update for the controllers that unlocks Bluetooth to allow them to work wirelessly with other game systems. It would also "avoid a lot of plastic and circuit board trash," adds Ars. From the report: Stadia's controllers were custom-made to connect directly to the Internet, reducing lag and allowing for instant firmware updates and (sometimes painful) connections to smart TVs. There's Bluetooth inside the Stadia controller, but it's only used when you're setting up Stadia, either with a TV, a computer with the Chrome browser, or a Chromecast Ultra. The Google Store's page for the Stadia controller states in a footnote: "Product contains Bluetooth Classic radio. No Bluetooth Classic functionality is enabled at this time. Bluetooth Classic may be implemented at a later date." (Bluetooth Classic is a more traditional version of Bluetooth than modern low-energy or mesh versions.) That potential later date can't get much later for fans of the Stadia controller. Many cite the controller's hand feel and claim it as their favorite. They'd like to see Google unlock Bluetooth to make their favorite something more than a USB-only controller and avoid a lot of plastic and circuit board trash.

"Now if you'd just enable Bluetooth on the controller, we could help the environment by not letting them become electronic waste," writes Roadrunner571 on one of many controller-related threads on the r/Stadia subreddit. "They created trash and they at least owe it to me to do their best within reason to prevent millions of otherwise perfectly good controllers from filling landfills," another wrote. Many have called for Google, if they're not going to push a firmware update themselves to unlock the functionality, to open up access to the devices themselves, so the community can do it for them. That's often a tricky scenario for large companies relying on a series of sub-contracted manufacturers to produce hardware. Some have suggested that the full refunds give Google more leeway to ignore the limited function of their devices post-shutdown.
It's worth noting that you can still plug a Stadia controller into the USB port on a Smart TV, computer, or gaming console and use it as a controller through a standard HID (Human Interface Device) connection. But, currently, it's not possible to connect the controllers wirelessly, unless you go through a lot of effort.
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Stadia Controllers Could Become E-Waste Unless Google Issues Bluetooth Update

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  • by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Saturday October 01, 2022 @07:31PM (#62929941)

    I remember back when the :CueCat devices dropped support that people wanted to use them for other things... but I think that died off quickly.

    Are trees Stadia controllers good enough that people will actually use them even if unlocked? Or just a handful of people?

    Seems like they were always destined to be e-Waste.

    • by Arethan ( 223197 )

      ^ This. CueCat is a great leading example here. The only tangible difference here is that Google is to blame.
      Imnsho, this is no different than the metric tons of electronic goods shipped into the US that break within the first year of usage.
      This is just rage against a tech company because it's fashionable. Get over it.

    • I've actually got a working CueCat kicking around for a barcode project I did a while back. Sure, it's niche and smartphones-as-scanners and RFID are replacing that, but it's still kinda a cool niche for projects these days.

      Thing is, the CueCat still scans barcodes when plugged into USB. The Stadia controller is my favorite current-gen "console" controller due to ergonomics, and a lot of the things I'd want to use it with don't even HAVE a USB port to plug into these days
    • by sjames ( 1099 )

      CueCat was a bit different. In that case, nobody seemed to actually want one other than to hack and use it as an inexpensive barcode reader at a time when manufacturers charged a lot for barcode readers just because they could.

      Support was dropped when they realized nobody actually used a CueCat as a CueCat anyway.

      Even if it's just a handful of people, a simple release of internal documentation they already have would enable that handful to do what they want and keep some percentage of them out of the landfi

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      The Stadia controllers are actually quite good. Decent buttons and d-pad, decent analogue sticks, fits well in the hand. They are a good choice for PC gaming, as long as you don't mind using them wired.

      It should be possible to replace the firmware on them, but it will depend on either reverse engineering it or Google releasing the details. It may also have a secure bootloader that needs signed firmware, requiring Google to release they key or a bypass to be found. A bypass might be possible, if the security

    • Are trees Stadia controllers good enough that people will actually use them even if unlocked? Or just a handful of people?

      Seems like they were always destined to be e-Waste.

      I have used some truly cheap and nasty controllers in my time, and they were well and truly "good enough". 99.9% of people who play games don't go out of their way to buy some magical high end controller promising some ultra low lag or extra tactile buttons to give you that competitive edge.

      And Stadia controllers (which admittedly I've played with only once) seemed to be no worse than the standard xbox wireless controller, which itself is already higher end than a lot of the controllers on the market.

  • by ickleberry ( 864871 ) <web@pineapple.vg> on Saturday October 01, 2022 @07:33PM (#62929943) Homepage
    Gadgets that stop working as soon as the cloud service behind it goes away. Often times the cloud service only acts as a glorified proxy for some HTTP traffic and is technically unnecessary but it saves users setting up port forwarding/dynamic DNS.

    All the more reason to seek out open-source alternatives
    • Which is the difference here. This isn't about a gadget that relies on a service, this is about a service that now leaves a gadget behind.

  • by leonbev ( 111395 ) on Saturday October 01, 2022 @07:34PM (#62929945) Journal

    Those Stadia controllers have a USB-C port on them, and when you plug them into a PC they'll work just like an Xbox controller without any special drivers.

    Sure, it would be nice if they would work that way via Bluetooth as well, but asking Google to update their firmware for a dead product so it can work on competing gaming services is a bit of a stretch.

    • by ichthus ( 72442 )
      I completely agree with you. Also, they could open-source the firmware for them.
      • by Anonymous Coward

        Yes. Open sourcing the firmware and providing whatever documentation exists would be the best possible solution.

        Asking Google to write all the Bluetooth firmware for this device that they have no further use for seems unreasonable.

    • Don't Be Evil.

    • It's not actually workingvon competing gaming devices as Google doesn't have a gaming device anymore, but it's also works on all Android devices including Google's Pixel phones. And they can sell the rest of the controllers that are still in warehouses/shops. Also by adding the Bluetooth option they can opt for not refunding the money for the controller. BUT, it all depends ofcourse on what type of Bluetooth controller is in there, if it doesn't have a fast low latency Bluetooth version it might not be usab
    • They are no longer "competing gaming services", technically.
  • enjoy your bricks... (Score:4, Interesting)

    by acroyear ( 5882 ) <jws-slashdot@javaclientcookbook.net> on Saturday October 01, 2022 @07:41PM (#62929947) Homepage Journal

    Google cut off the Nexus Android TV boxes at Android 7.something...and then forgot to ensure that those devices weren't given the 8.0 upgrade that wasn't going to work on them.

    So EVERY Nexus Android TV owner got a wonderful brick, as 8.0 was forced on them and then the boxes refused to work, with no easy way to backtrack. Google refused to acknowledge that this was a problem, and continue to have that attitude years later. I still have my brick. I've refused to port my app to Android TV for this very reason and stuck to just Chromecast's protocol.

    So I expect the same - they don't care, they won't care, you have a wonderful brick, just like the Glass owners now have a great looking piece of plastic.

    • Nah. It was e-waste the day it was manufactured
    • Same story for the Nexus 7 2013 tablet. "Upgrade" to Lollipop made the device essentially unusable. I believe they tried to point the finger at Asus, but the product was branded as Google. Even cursory testing should have revealed this gross defect. Weasels.
    • I don't think Google Glass made it into actual public sale. And it was never "great looking". And you shouldn't forget that parts of Google Glass are still alive: The operating system and user interface. It's called "Wear" now and resettled onto watches. (which are way more comfortable to wear)

  • by iAmWaySmarterThanYou ( 10095012 ) on Saturday October 01, 2022 @07:47PM (#62929951)

    How many times does G have to come up with a new device or service, gets a bunch of users but not enough to be #1 in a vertical then abandons the whole thing?

    This happens every fucking time.

    Stop it, just fucking stop, stop buying into G's shit.

    • by godrik ( 1287354 )

      I got a stadia controler and the chrome cast that goes with it. They were free!

      The chromecast is useful. Never plugged the controller though.

    • Stop it, just fucking stop, stop buying into G's shit.

      And yet Google gave refunds to people for both hardware and software in this case. If you're telling people to not work with Google due to e-waste then they don't care. If you're telling people to not work with Google because Google screws them then your comment fails to show how people were negatively affected by this drop given how simple they make it time and time again to migrate to something else.

      Software / services don't exist in perpetuity. Google may have a worse track record of dropping them than o

  • by gTsiros ( 205624 ) on Saturday October 01, 2022 @08:00PM (#62929971)

    I would issue a firmware update that completely bricks the controllers.

    A month later, release a new controller.

    • by leonbev ( 111395 )

      For what purpose, exactly? The Stadia service is getting shut down completely on January 18th, 2023.

      • by gTsiros ( 205624 )

        What, do they need a _reason_ to do it? Do you want them to send you a personal letter, maybe?

  • by Somervillain ( 4719341 ) on Saturday October 01, 2022 @09:45PM (#62930045)
    This is actually a huge tragedy, not for the volume of Stadia controllers out there, but because it illustrates a huge problem. Device manufacturers purposely make their devices, even expensive ones like phones, laptops and tablets, disposable.

    If a manufacturer wants to brick a device, they should have to pay to have it disposed of correctly. There should be a law forcing Google to pay to send boxes and shipping labels to every stadia owner to have it sent back to Google or to an eWaste processing center. Either pay to dispose of the eWaste you created...or provide enough updates it can be reused for other purposes.

    Your devices are unnecessarily disposable because we let manufacturers get by with that. They've colluded to remove replaceable batteries, upgradeable storage, and headphone jacks...things customers WANT, but hey, we need our phones. Take away a headphone jack or replaceable battery, but give us no alternative, the free market can't work and everyone suffers...especially this growing eWaste problem. This is an area where we can't trust industry to self-regulate. We need gov regulations to combat this, unfortunately.

    If not that, do the soda can model...when you buy soda, beer, etc, you have to pre-pay the deposit. In my state, it's $0.05. A 12-pack has a $0.60 penalty automatically added at purchase. We should do the same with disposable electronics. If it costs $20 to process a laptop with a fixed battery, the customer should have to pay that money up front...give the manufacturers a good reason to both clearly label what is disposable and to actually make devices less disposable.
    • Device manufacturers purposely make their devices ... disposable.

      It costs money to make devices more robust. Most consumers are unwilling to pay those costs.

      There should be a law forcing Google to pay to send boxes and shipping labels to every stadia owner to have it sent back to Google or to an eWaste processing center.

      To be blunt, that is stupid. The emissions from all those shipments will be worse than just tossing the phone.

      You should focus on far more important issues, like disposable diapers, which count for more waste in a day than phones do in a decade.

      • by sjames ( 1099 )

        In many cases, the cost of making the device repairable is pennies. Literally, less than 1 U.S. dollar. In other cases, not making the device harder to repair would actually save money, consider the cost (even qty. 100,000) of funky special new screws vs industry standard screws. Or the cost of applying glue to a million units vs. skip the glue. Or develop special snowflake update mechanism vs. use the one built in to the software toolkit that comes with the device.

        There are a very few security applications

      • It costs money to make devices more robust. Most consumers are unwilling to pay those costs.

        There should be a law forcing Google to pay to send boxes and shipping labels to every stadia owner to have it sent back to Google or to an eWaste processing center.

        To be blunt, that is stupid. The emissions from all those shipments will be worse than just tossing the phone.

        You should focus on far more important issues, like disposable diapers, which count for more waste in a day than phones do in a decade.

        eWaste is typically filled with lots of toxic metals and chemicals that can leech into the water supply. Sure a diaper is disgusting and fecal matter is toxic for awhile, but once buried, it becomes fertilizer. I wouldn't eat tomatoes grown in a field of eWaste. Well-washed tomatoes grown in a field with composted diapers would probably be tastier and more nutritious than those you typically buy at the store.

        However, regardless, disposable electronics cost us at purchase and cost us at disposal. Con

    • If not that, do the soda can model...when you buy soda, beer, etc, you have to pre-pay the deposit. In my state, it's $0.05. A 12-pack has a $0.60 penalty automatically added at purchase.

      How does this work when beverages are purchased in one state for consumption in another state, such as during a road trip?

      We should do the same with disposable electronics.

      How would this work for electronics purchased in one state for use in another state?

      • A deposit/reverse collateral in the 5-10% range for bottles, glass and other temporary drinking vessels is a tried and proven method once paired with reverse vending machines. And state to state in the USA is significantly easier than country to country in the EU, but in both cases there are competing solutions with various success.
        Electronics are a bit messier, but there are a lot of places where retailers are mandates by law to accept returns of what is essentially ewaste.

      • by dryeo ( 100693 )

        Where I am (BC), they refuse to take out of Province bottles and cans and they're surprisingly good at spotting them, they're mostly American cans/bottles and the simple lack of French on the label is a give away though they do spot ones from the next Province over as well.. They do have bins to chuck them in so at least cans still get recycled.
        They also charge for ewaste when you buy electronics, even a toaster. I think that money just finances the recycling centres, basically sorting. Probably mostly bala

        • What difference is there between BC and Alberta bottles and cans? As much as they wouldn't want to put French on, I think they still have to.

          • by dryeo ( 100693 )

            Not really sure, I did have some rejected due to being from Alberta IIRC, perhaps further east.

      • If not that, do the soda can model...when you buy soda, beer, etc, you have to pre-pay the deposit. In my state, it's $0.05. A 12-pack has a $0.60 penalty automatically added at purchase.

        How does this work when beverages are purchased in one state for consumption in another state, such as during a road trip?

        At a nickel a can, we take the L...and we get the deposit back on the other 99% of bottles and cans that are purchased in-state and consumed in-state.

        We should do the same with disposable electronics.

        How would this work for electronics purchased in one state for use in another state?

        Well, there are a few ways. First, you could enable big-box stores to use all of their locations as dropoff points; if a person in North Carolina bought something from a Best Buy in California on a vacation, it could still be returned locally. Alternatively, this could be solved even more easily if the distributor provided prepaid shipping labels and the devic

    • Device manufacturers purposely make their devices, even expensive ones like phones, laptops and tablets, disposable.

      This wasn't about making a device disposable. This was about making a device function. Stadia didn't function properly with standard bluetooth connections which is why they added WiFi to it in the first place. And if the bluetooth radio identified as a gamepad then the setup function wouldn't work correctly as the OS would consider it a standard gamepad.

      This (specific case) isn't about a device being unnecessarily disposable.

  • I put a new connector in my 35 year old Nintendo and it's still up and running fine. There are a still a handful of games I haven't finished yet, so it still serves a purpose of entertaining me. I can't say the same for an Stadia or N-Gage 2.0, which belonged in the trash almost immediately after they were manufactured.

  • So what? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday October 02, 2022 @02:48AM (#62930281)
    A whole generation of gamers survived on wired controllers. If you're as green as you make yourselves out to be then you should just suck it up and plug in the USB cable instead of needlessly throwing them out to create more e-waste.
    • by sjames ( 1099 )

      I guess you didn't read the part about some devices not having a USB port on them...

  • currently, it's not possible to connect the controllers wirelessly, unless you go through a lot of effort [github.com].

    "A lot of effort" in this case means installing python (from an installer) and then installing a daemon (from an installer) and running it. If you think that's a lot of effort, you provably do not belong on Slashdot.

  • These things might look like controllers but clearly they boot up and sync over the internet to offer their control functionality. I don't see it being a case of flicking a switch. More likey that Google would either have to unlock the devices up and provide some rudimentary guidance so people can homebrew something onto them, or they need to OTA update them to be bluetooth controllers. There is probably a lot of effort involved and no second chances. Given that Google are offering a refund they'll probably

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