When I connect my phone via bluetooth to my car, there's a delay in the sound. But when I have it connected to my bluetooth headset. Is it because my car has an older bluetooth or whatever?
Also what's the difference between throw and bluetooth?
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I got a bluetooth stereo headphones that I use with A2DP enabled bluetooth dongle on my PC to listen to music wirelessly and watch movies in silence. I also use bluetooth ActiveSync with the same bluetooth dongle. Dongle uses Toshiba stack for windows.
Problem is when I am listening to music from my PC thru A2DP profile and then connect my Treo 750 for ActiveSync, the sound comes thru my headset not in smooth manner anymore. It breaks and delays sometimes. Maybe a port conflict. Is there any way I could get around it??
sounds more like bluetooth cant provide enough bandwidth
maybe a bluetooth v2.0 dongle could cope
hi,
I have a bluetooth headset (Samsung one)
When I power on my headset, and then my bluetooth on the HD2, i am connected, but iI have to go all the time into the bluetooth setup and reconnect to Stereio AUDIO and HandsFree.
Why ?
thanks
Sorry, no solution, just confirmaiton of another BT issue...
I'm also having trouble with Bluetooth.
I have a quite old Motorola ear piece and a more recent JVC car stareo head unit with Bluetooth capability, neither will connect to make/receive calls.
Both connected and worked as they should do on my last phone...
So I recently got this bluetooth audio receiver (got for 15 bucks off dailysteals) for my car so I can play audio through bluetooth using an aux port. However every time I restart my car I have to manually reconnect my phone to the music bluetooth device because it does not auto reconnect. But, when I turn on the car, the cars integrated bluetooth (car bluetooth only can play call audio not music audio) does reconnect to the phone. Is there a way that I can tell my phone to reconnect to the bluetooth music receiver when it connects to the cars bluetooth so I don't have to keep reconnecting the bluetooth receiver that receives the music. I know the galaxy s3 can connect to both at the same time because I have done it before manually.
Thanks for the help
I have a 2006 car that has an aux port but not Bluetooth, so I bought a Bluetooth headset to use for calls. Is it possible to have the phone plugged into aux and be listening to music, and then take or place a call on my Bluetooth headset?
I am connecting two phones to a helmet intercom (ncom) via Bluetooth. This is supported, and works fine regarding answering phone calls and such. Like if a normal Bluetooth headset is connected.
But... I want to be able have an open connection all the time (not only when receiving calls) and I want to be able to connect a wired headset so that the sound from the Bluetooth mic goes to the wired speakers and the wired mic goes to the Bluetooth speakers.
Does it make sense? The purpose is to be able to communicate to my pillion who does not have an intercom in the helmet.
Regards, Lars.