• We’re currently investigating an issue related to the forum theme and styling that is impacting page layout and visual formatting. The problem has been identified, and we are actively working on a resolution. There is no impact to user data or functionality, this is strictly a front-end display issue. We’ll post an update once the fix has been deployed. Thanks for your patience while we get this sorted.

Bluetooth headset & Win 7? Possible?

Compman55

Golden Member
I cannot get my samsung SBH-500 headset to pair with my bluetooth on my computer. I want to use them as stereo headphones which they work nicly on my cell phone. It is in pair mode and I removed them from my menu on the cell phone just in case it was conflicting. Any ideas?
 
What brand bluetooth adapter are you running, and what bluetooth stack is it using? Does the bluetooth adapter/stack support A2DP (advanced audio distribution profile)?

If it doesn't support A2DP, you might get it working but you probably won't be satisfied with the results (i.e. poor audio quality and frequent disconnects).
 
Its an apple mini. Whatever comes from the factory.

How can I find this out? I really do not understand what all that is. Im sure if my 2006 old cell phone has it, a 2009 computer would but I could be wrong.
 
Since you are running Win7 on a Mac Mini, you are stuck using Windows 7's built-in bluetooth support. It is pretty basic and has no built-in support for the A2DP profile (Microsoft left it up to the bluetooth manufacturers to provide support for more advanced profiles like A2DP). I'm assuming that it doesn't work under OSX, either? I know little about OSX, but I dimly recall reading somewhere that the Mac hardware is fully capable of supporting bluetooth headsets and A2DP but that it doesn't have software support yet in OSX.

What happens when you try to pair the headset with the computer in Windows 7? You have to set the headset to discoverable mode ( http://ars.samsung.com/customer/usa...PG_ID=0&AT_ID=96045&PROD_SUB_ID=0&PROD_ID=786 ). Once you have done this, you'll then need to run the bluetooth connection wizard in Win7 to search for the headset ( http://windows.microsoft.com/en-US/windows7/Add-a-Bluetooth-enabled-device-to-your-computer ). Once it is found, you'll have to enter the pair code (should be 0000). You'd go through a similar process in OSX.

If you can't connect it as a stereo headset, try to connect the headset as a mono headset. If you get it connected, check windows update with the bluetooth headset connected to see if any new drivers are downloaded.

If you can't get it to work, you'll likely have to invest in a bluetooth dongle that comes with a driver supporting headsets. Make sure to read the description to ensure that the dongle supports headsets/A2DP as a lot of the cheaper ones don't (like the ultra-cheap ones at DealExtreme or Monoprice, etc).
 
Last edited:
Back
Top