Jobs & Education2 mins ago
Bluetooth hands free and Internet chat
I have a Motorola HS810 Bluetooth hands free which i am using with a Nokia phone. My computer has a bluetooth dongle using which i want to use the hands free device for internet chatting. Could some one help me with the steps i shud follow? I have paired the hands free with the computer but am unable to figure what to do next.
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by gautamk_99. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.In Skype for example, go to Tools... Options and on the Sound Devices tab, select Bluetooth Audio or similar on the Audio In & Audio Out drop-down boxes.
In Messenger, click Tools... Audio/Video Tuning Wizard. Click through it and when it asks you to choose your audio in & out devices, again choose Bluetooth audio.
Sometimes, this will mess up your general audio settings. You may find that your music now goes through your headset rather than your normal speakers. If this happens, go to Control Panel and open Sounds and Audio Devices. On the Audio tab, change your playback and recording default devices back to your soundcard. You can leave the settings on the Voice tab as whatever they are (probably bluetooth now). If you restart your music player, all should now be well!
Two things to remember, your hands free will only have a talk time of 1 to 2 hours before the battery goes. This may be a long time on a mobile, but when the talking's free like it is online, you may find the battery goes on you every now and then. Also, even if your bluetooth dongle has a claimed range of 100 metres, your headset is most likely limited to 10 metres. You'll have to use trial and error here.
If you do need to post back, include your operating system and service pack and name of the bluetooth software if possible. For example, if you're using the standard Microsoft Bluetooth drivers in XP service pack 2, then we're on a non-starter and you'll need to find the CD for the dongle and do a bit of messing about, but it'll be worth it! Talking to anyone in the world for free while not being tied to your PC is the way it's meant to be!
If you're using XP SP2, it loads up its own bluetooth drivers which unfortunately have very limited functionality compared to the one that'll be on the CD. You'll need to use the driver on the CD, but there's a procedure you'll need to follow to get it to work. Read the first post on this page http://tinyurl.com/ckng9 which will explain how it works. The process describes the procedure for Widcomm Bluetooth drivers but I have also used this approach for Bluesoleil drivers, so hopefully, it'll also work for whatever make of driver is on your CD.
Let us know how you get on. Good luck and post back if it doesn't work.
Hi gautamk, it sounds like you were almost there but something conspired against you. Did you double-click the bluetooth icon or the "My Bluetooth Places" desktop icon to finish the installation? You would have had to re-pair any devices in the widcomm driver you had paired when you were using the Microsoft driver. I'm at a bit of a loss. All I can suggest is that you try again if you think it's worth it. Personally, I think it's worth it to use your handsfree to chat online as you can get up and wander around. Also, I have installed a bluetooth dongle using widcomm software on this machine running XP pro sp2 using those instructions, so I know that in general, they work but there may be something specific with your pc that's stopping it from happening.
Contd........
I hope something works for you! Let me know how you go.
As for the tv tuner, if you're not using it at all, you could try to disable the hardware in Device Manager. It may not load the drivers for it if the hardware is "missing" as far as XP is concerned. Also worth looking at is Startup Control Panel which you can find at http://www.mlin.net/StartupCPL.shtml . It installs as a Control Panel entry that allows you to enable and disable the programs that start up at boot time. It's very like msconfig, but will show the more deeply hidden stuff as well. It's small and free so it's got to be worth a shot.
As for me, I am (or try to be!) a structural engineer. I moved from Ireland to Southampton about 8 years ago to study and stayed here to work. I've been "into" computers though since I got a Commodore VIC20 around a hundred years ago!
I hope you get your problems sorted out, keep us informed. Good luck!
I downloaded the start up control panel but was unable to figure out what to disable cause there seems nothing related to the video card or graphics. The link is a pic of the Device Manager and start up control panel. If you any suggestions let me know. Thank you. http://s44.yousendit.com/d.aspx?id=1BQ1KLGE92O7X2XRQOX0J 3UOMQ
First, the bluetooth isn't quite installed fully yet. You need to right-click on the Generic Bluetooth Radio entry and select Update Driver..., click Don't Look On The Internet or words to that effect, then Next. Choose the Advanced option on the bottom, then Next again. Choose the Don't Search option, then Next again. In the box that appears, there should be CSR or Mavin or something else. Select the most likely suspect and it should say that it's not digitally signed just below the box, just click Next. The pc will think for a while and copy some files around. When it's finished, there should only be one entry in the Bluetooth Devices bit, and also only one blue and white icon in the system tray. Right-click the bluetooth icon in the system tray and finish setting up your system. You may have been here already and I apologise if you have. I bought myself a new bluetooth adaptor today (the old one was a bit flaky) and that's what I had to do to get it to work.
For your tv tuner, it will be listed in either Sound, Video and Game Controllers, USB Controllers (as it might be a USB device, just inside the case) or PCMCIA adaptors. It's most likely the first one.
Your startup control panel shows some interesting stuff. Both mslagent and WebRebates0 are spyware, you definitely don't want them to be running at start up. It might be worth spending a bit of time putting everything that appears on the different tabs of Startup Control Panel into Google to see if it's needed. AGRSMMSG is for your dialup modem which would be unnecessary if you were on broadband for example, and ezShieldProtector for ...(can't see the rest!) is for if you drag files to a blank CD or DVD in Windows Explorer rather than starting up your CD writing software. A general rule is that if you don't use it all the time (like antivirus and firewalls etc.) you don't need it to start up at boot time since it just uses memory and other resources.
I've linked to a few good adware removers in an old post you'll find at http://tinyurl.com/8tum5
Good luck and keep me posted. If I'm telling you stuff you already know, please don't be offended!
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