[Q] Bluetooth low energy (or Bluetooth LE / BLE / Bluetooth Smart) supported - Moto G Q&A, Help & Troubleshooting

Hi,
I coudn't find any information if Bluetooh 4 also includes Bluetooth low energy (or Bluetooth LE, or BLE, marketed as Bluetooth Smart Ready) on motorola specification.
Acording to bluetooth.com is supported:
www bluetooth com/Pages/Bluetooth-Smart-Devices-List.aspx
Anybody can confirm?

whocarez_pt said:
Hi,
I coudn't find any information if Bluetooh 4 also includes Bluetooth low energy (or Bluetooth LE, or BLE, marketed as Bluetooth Smart Ready) on motorola specification.
Acording to bluetooth.com is supported:
www bluetooth com/Pages/Bluetooth-Smart-Devices-List.aspx
Anybody can confirm?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes, at least according to Motorola Support:
Supported Bluetooth Profiles
Your device uses Stereo Bluetooth® technology Class 2, v4.0 LE + EDR.
The following Bluetooth profiles are supported:
A2DP,
AVRCP,
BIP,
BPP,
DUN,
FTP,
GAP,
GAVDP,
GOEP,
HFP,
HID,
HSP,
OPP,
PAN,
PBAP,
SPP
Click to expand...
Click to collapse

Related

A2DP Bluetooth Question

I have a Bluetooth adaptor for my laptop (TRENDnet TBW-101UB) its Bluetooth 1.1 compliant, can I use the Motorola HT820 on my laptop to listen to music wirelessly, or do I need a 1.2 or 2.0 compliant adaptor?
Moto HT820
Had a look through my user guide and it says headphones are bluetooth 1.2
complient.
driver or hardware
can this be solved by downloading A2DP drivers for Windows XP or do I need to buy a new adaptor? My adaptor is actually 1.2 compliant I made a mistake, but I'm using the Windows Bluetooth Stack. I read Windows bluetooth stack does not support A2DP.
pretty mixed results about this
as far as i know A2DP was a part of bluetooth 1.1 too
at least it did show up in the bluetooth protocol back then
not sure if anybody implemented it
get vidcomm software for your dongle and give it a go
widcomm drivers
where can i get widcomm drivers for the TRENDnet TBW-101UB dongle?
syalam said:
where can i get widcomm drivers for the TRENDnet TBW-101UB dongle?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Did you look around on the developer's homepage? The Widcomm BT stack by itself is only accessible from resellers (hardware manufacturers).

Bluetooth

I see that our phone have the following specs about bluetooth.
Bluetooth 2.1 + EDR technology
HSP [headset]
HFP [hands-free]
A2DP [stereo audio]
AVRCP [media control]
SDAP [service discovery application]
PAN [ad hoc network]
GOEP [generic object exchange profile]
GAVDP [generic audio/video distribution]
PBAP [phone book access]
Computer Sync supported: Yes
I have a car stereo that is capable of PBAP and AVRCP and it doesn't seem to work with the phone. Anyone else having this problem?

[Q] Implementing addition bluetooth profile in android

Is it possible to write an own implementation of some bt profile? Like
sap or handsfree (not a AG side) ?

[Q] Bluetooth Phone Audio to low.

Devices..
Motorola Roadster 2
Sony DSX-S130BTX
VZW GS3
Roadster outputs proper volume levels for both Media and Phone. So phone outputs are actually good.
I currently blame Sony, and here is why I think its them..
S130 outputs proper volume level for Media. Inaudible for Phone.
Phone BT Call Volume is maxed. Extra Volume will not function. I notice that when S3 connects/disconnects from the S130 that is says Headphones Connected/Disconnected.. in incredibly small text that is hard to read. I think the S130 is reporting itself as a headset so the S3 uses wired headset/bt headset volume rules.
Is there any way to see what profiles are actually being received by the S3? I will be testing my phone on a different Sony unit that another S3 works with correctly in a bit, as well as that S3 on the S130.
S130 BT Profile support from Crutchfield's webpage.
Bluetooth Profiles: The DSX-S310BTX supports a wide variety of Bluetooth (version 2.1 + EDR) profiles, including HFP (Hands-Free Profile), OPP (Object Push Profile), PBAP (Phone Book Access Profile), A2DP (Advanced Audio Distribution Profile), and AVRCP (Audio/Video Remote Control Profile), so you can get the most from your Bluetooth-enabled devices.
HFP 1.5 (Hands-Free Profile): Hands-free communication with your Bluetooth enabled cellular phone in the vehicle (incoming/outgoing calls supported).
OPP (Object Push Profile): Phonebook transfer from your Bluetooth enabled mobile phone to the head unit.
PBAP (Phone Book Access Profile): Phonebook access from your Bluetooth enabled cell-phone to the head unit.
A2DP 1.2 (Advanced Audio Distribution Profile): Music streaming from your Bluetooth enabled phone or audio player to the head unit.
AVRCP 1.3 (Audio/Video Remote Control Profile): Basic music playback control of your Bluetooth enabled phone or audio player from the head unit.
http://wiki.siemens-enterprise.com/wiki/Support_of_Bluetooth_Hands-free_profile_(HFP)
HFP is taking over for the older HSP.

[Q] Bluetooth 3.0 vs. 4.0 Headset profile difference?!

Hello forum,
I'm using a Jabra Supreme bluetooth headset with my Galaxy Note 2.
When I'm making a skype / VoIP call, the sound quality is excellent. When I do a call to the same number via regular cellular connection however, the sound quality is less than mediocre (and also worse than without the headset).
Does anyone know why that is like that?
I'm assuming that the phone uses different bluetooth profiles for cellular connection, and when I'm doing a voip call.
But it should be the same profile (HSP). It can't be A2DP, because the sound transfer one only goes one-way. The only other possible profile is "Hands-free-profile".
The headset supports bluetooth 3.0, whereas the Galaxy Note 2 supports 4.0. Is it possible that the audio quality under the HSP profile with bluetooth 3.0 is lower than with bluetooth 4.0?
Anyone any ideas?

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