After you pair your accessory, you can use it with your device. To pair multiple Bluetooth accessories, repeat these steps. If you have multiple Bluetooth devices paired with your iPhone or iPad, you can choose which audio source you want to use.

To unpair a Bluetooth accessory, go to Settings > Bluetooth, find the device you want to unpair, and tap the More Info button , then Forget this Device. This removes the accessory from the list of available Bluetooth devices.


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You can use Bluetooth to connect some devices to your phone without a cord. After you pair a Bluetooth device for the first time, your devices can pair automatically. If your phone is connected to something through Bluetooth, at the top of the screen, you'll find a Bluetooth icon . Learn how to connect a Bluetooth device with our step-by-step tutorial.

Before you start, make sure that your Windows 11 PC supports Bluetooth. For more info on how to check, see Fix Bluetooth problems in Windows. If you need help adding a device without Bluetooth capabilities, see Add a device to a Windows PC.

In quick settings: To find the quick setting for Bluetooth, select the Network, Sound, or Battery icons ( ) next to the time and date on the right side of your taskbar. Select Bluetooth  to turn it on. If it's turned on without any Bluetooth devices connected, it might appear as Not connected .




If you don't see Bluetooth  in quick settings, you might need to add it. For more info, see Change notifications and quick settings in Windows 11.

Select Start  > Settings  > Bluetooth & devices  > Printers & scanners  > Add device. Wait for it to find nearby printers, choose the one you want to use, then select Add device.

Before you start, make sure that your Windows 10 PC supports Bluetooth. For more info on how to check, see Fix Bluetooth problems in Windows 10. If you need help adding a device without Bluetooth capabilities, see Add a device to a Windows 10 PC.

On your PC, select Start > Settings  > Devices  > Bluetooth & other devices > Add Bluetooth or other device > Bluetooth. Choose the device and follow additional instructions if they appear, then select Done.

Turn on your Bluetooth keyboard, mouse, or other device and make it discoverable. The way you make it discoverable depends on the device. Check the device or visit the manufactur's website to learn how.

On your PC, select Start  > Settings  > Devices  > Bluetooth & other devices  > Add Bluetooth or other device > Bluetooth. Choose the device and follow additional instructions if they appear, then select Done.

Select Start  > Settings  > Devices  > Printers & scanners > Add a printer or scanner. Wait for it to find nearby printers, then choose the one you want to use and select Add device.

So I tried connecting by typing adb connect [phone_ip]:[port] in the terminal and that worked flawlessly. Didn't even need to plug the phone into the computer with a USB. Your phone will tell you the IP and port right above the "pair with QR code" option inside the Wi-Fi debugging setting. Just connect to that address.

After that, the connection wizard at least recognized my device (Samsung Note 10), but failed to connect and gave a generic error message. I avoided this by using adb pair : as mentioned in this answer. Seems like this feature still has a ways to go.

In my case, I have a galaxy s10e, and I need to put my phone in charge and activate wifi debugging and when it's connected with android studio, I can unplug the phone and it still works. In Huawei there is an option in developer options "Allow ADB debugging in load only mode", we can disable it and it works without charging the phone. On s10e there is no such option, I think that it is allowed by default and we can't change it.

I was having the same problem.QR Code, Pairing code, or even connecting manually with the "adb connect [phone_ip]:[port]" method didn't work.However, the problem was solved as soon as I disabled the "AP isolation" option on the modem settings.

Remote Access allows you to access your institution's subscriptions to AMS electronic products from anywhere, aslong as you have internet access and your device has:local storagecookies enabledJavaScript enabled

You are requesting remote access of this device with the network of.By clicking 'Accept' below, you agree to the posted terms and conditions ofuse of AMS electronic products, and you confirm that you are anauthorized user as per the terms and conditions of the signedlicense agreement(s) of the subscribing institution with whichyou are pairing. Note that any violation of the posted terms and conditions and/or the terms and conditions of the signed license agreement(s) willresult in termination of your remote access.

However, you are already paired with , and you can remain paired with that institution for another days.AMS Publications pagesMathSciNetAMS Online JournalsAMS eBooks

Hi, trying to pair my POCO X3 NFC to Android Studio chipmonk. I went to Pair Device using QR Code in Android Studio and it brought up the QR code. I then went into Pair Device with QR code under Wireless Debugging on my phone and scanned the QR code. I just get a spinning circle and Pairing Device... on my screen but it does not pair. What have I done wrong?

Watch the video below. It will explain how to pair your phone with your SYNC system and walk you through the setup for 911 Assist, downloading your phonebook, turning on the privacy setting, and more.

If they are zwave classic devices, you may have to pair them close to the hub to get them added to the network, then move them to their final location, then after everything is in place run a zwave repair to get the most efficient routing.

If they are Z wave plus devices, they can join the network as long as they are within range of any repeater on that network, but you will still get the best results if you start from the hub and work outward with all your Mains powered devices, Then go back to the hub and work outward for all your battery powered devices.

For security reasons, some older Z wave door locks require being within whisper distance of the hub when they first join the network so that an encrypted security key can be exchanged. This is typically about 2 m. And that is independent of any repeaters that the lock will eventually use, Because only the hub can issue the security key. (newer devices using S2 security can handle this differently.)

Thanks for the info, both @RBoy and @JDRoberts. They are definitely classic Z-Wave devices. So just to confirm, if I pair them close to the hub, then move them to their final place, which is outside the range of the hub but within the range of a paired repeater, will they find their way home? Is that what a Z-Wave repair would do?

The zwave repair utility asks each individual device to send the hub a list of its nearest neighbors. The hub then uses that to calculate an efficient routing table for each device and sends it back to that device.

I have a Bluetooth speaker in my house. Myself and my partner periodically connect to it using either our phones (2  Android) or laptops (1  MacBook and 1  laptop PC) to play music whilst at home. As far as I know, it's only possible to have a single device connected to a Bluetooth device at any given time.

The problem arises when one of us wants to play music from a device, but we are unable to pair with the speaker because some other device in the house is already paired. There is no way (that I'm aware of) of knowing which device is already connected, or where in the house that device is. The Bluetooth device we're connecting to is a StarTech Bluetooth wireless receiver - a normal speaker actually connects to this receiver. Since this device has no menus of any sort, there's no way to just walk up to the receiver and press a 'disconnect' button. In fact, simply turning-off-and-on-again doesn't work, as the device automatically re-pairs with the last device it was connected to.

There doesn't appear to be an option on any of the devices to 'force pair' with the music receiver device. I totally understand that this would normally be a security concern, but this is a speaker device in our own home, so we'd like to find a way to be able to override this security and allow forcibly disconnecting of any existing paired connections.

Unfortunately you can't force pair it. Unless you buy a new bluetooth speaker that allows multiple connections or comes with a software control panel such as the BlasterAXX. It is understandable that once a connection is established another device should not be able to terminate this connection and force a new one.

Receivers that allow only one connection are doomed to reconnect to the last device connected and the only way to resolve it is to disconnect the other device. I had a number of receivers and bluetooth speakers in the past and I always ran around the house to find the device that is connected to the speaker. If the receiver is not configured by the factory to allow multiple connections then you can't do much. Unless you want to crack open the receiver and start messing around with the chips (which I am sure you wouldn't like to do) e24fc04721

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