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How to Use Bluetooth on Your iPhone

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|  Updated:  
2016-03-26 13:17:33
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iPhone For Dummies
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Your iPhone uses the Bluetooth 4.0 protocol. Bluetooth is a short-range (up to 300 feet) wireless protocol used to attach, or pair, devices to your iPhone. Unlike Wi-Fi, which broadcasts its availability continuously, Bluetooth has to be turned on to make your iPhone or other device discoverable so that they can see each other. A passkey or PIN (Personal Identification Number) is used to make that connection private.

One of the most common devices paired with iPhone is a wireless headset. This small device is either inserted in your ear or wrapped around it and has both a speaker to hear the person you're talking to and a microphone so they can hear you.

You can have phone conversations without risking strangulation by earphone cord or, worse yet, catching the cord on something, resulting in your iPhone flying through the air and smashing on the floor.

Other devices that you might want to pair with your iPhone are earphones for listening to music, a physical keyboard, or your car so you can answer calls by tapping a button on the steering wheel or radio. If you pair two iPhones, you can share photos, files, and even an Internet connection between them. To connect devices to your iPhone via Bluetooth,

  1. On your iPhone, go to Settings→Bluetooth and tap the Bluetooth button on.

    The Bluetooth screen opens. Tapping On makes your iPhone discoverable, which means other devices with Bluetooth turned on can see your iPhone. The Bluetooth icon appears in the status bar.

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  2. Turn on Bluetooth on the device you want to connect so it too is discoverable.

    If the device is another iPhone or computer, you have to turn on Bluetooth on that iPhone or computer too. Active devices show up in a list on the Bluetooth screen on your iPhone.

    A Bluetooth headset only needs to be turned on. Obviously a headset doesn't have a keypad to enter a passkey, but it comes with an assigned passkey, which you need to pair with your iPhone. Check the instructions that came with the headset for the passkey code or try 0000. (It's usually the default passcode.)

  3. In the list, tap the device you want to pair with your iPhone.

  4. Enter the passkey on the keypad that appears on your iPhone, if requested.

    The two devices can now communicate across the Bluetooth connection.

  5. To turn off Bluetooth and make your iPhone undiscoverable, tap Settings → Bluetooth→Off.

    Another method is to drag up from the bottom of the screen to open the Control Center and tap the Bluetooth button.

    The Bluetooth button on the Control Center is dimmed and the Bluetooth icon disappears from the status bar.

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About This Article

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About the book author:

Joe Hutsko is a technology enthusiast, a journalist, an author, and a consultant. He contributes to the New York Times blog Green Inc., and has covered the latest tech trends for Fortune, MSNBC.com, Wired, the Washington Post, Newsweek, Time, Macworld, PC World, TV Guide, and others. He runs the green gadget blog gGadget.org and his personal Web site, JOEyGADGET.com.

Barbara Boyd has worked as a marketing and technology consultant for more than 10 years and is the author of several books.