if you paid 380 for the headset you prob been had i paid mine for 19.99 at
compusa. but anyway that's not why i'm here.i not sure what you are using
for program to use bluetooth, but if you are using the windows driver for
bluetooth, that is one reason why it's hard to set it up the way you want,
did you do my last post and see if you had setup the default sound device so
that it connected the bluetooth protocol - remember it will not have the
name of your bluetooth headset here - and also it's not vista fault in this
case, because audio gateway is bluetooth technology not vista, and i don't
know if you realised from your last post i understood that you expected your
bluetooth headset to work exactly like a usb headset? ...... wrong, they
are different technology, although they are close in concept, so don't get
irritated just yet, bluetooth although usefull, powerfull, easy to use,
might sometimes need a few tweaks to run properly, that is because of driver
fault, and yes it's a windows based driver, so in this case we can blame
windows but it's not vista's fault, xp would probably give you the same
problem, i had bluetooth longer than i had OS and i had little problems with
every one of them, but after i got it tweaked it works fine, and i love my
antenna.
Just FYI: here's why i love my antenna, Instead of the usual distance of 30
feet range that it is usually works,
I sacrificed speed for distance, i took usb1 instead of usb2 - which gave me
speed but only 30 feet -
my usb1 can give me 330 feet range to work, and contrary to some belief, any
device connecting to my pc has it's range increased so to speak
my dad though that if i was 329 feet away, my pc could connect to the phone
which only has 30 feet range, but if my phone tryed to connect to pc, then
it wouldn't work, because of the distance it had to make but that is
incorrect, my theory is that the computer when notices that something is
trying to talk to it within it's range then make up for the lack in the
device with weaker range. but that has yet to be proven, but that's the only
thing i could think of.
--
Jonathan Perreault
Personnal Advice To You:
#1: Do Not Undermine Windows's Work, Or It'll Undermine You As A User.
#2: Torture Windows (Any) Now Before It Tortures You
Best Comments From Users:
No Matter The Problem Even With Linux, It's Microsoft's And Windows's Faults
A common mistake that people make when trying to design something completely
foolproof is to underestimate the ingenuity of complete fools.