its been a couple months could someone answer
No, unless that wireless card is a bluetooth adapter some computers will have it built in but if you don't know it doesn't.
Try using utility from the wireless adapter manufacture. Also there are always two options to manage wireless cards. By default windows wireless zero does not have access to the wireless adapter. Try changing the last option in wireless adapter properties.
No, you can't. iPod does not support BlueTooth products. Yes you can. Use the Wireless Motorola S9 Bluetooth headphones with Motorola Bluetooth Adapter D650. Plug adapter into the iPod Touch and you are good to go. I have been doing this successfully for two years now.
There is Velcro in the package with the BlueTooth adapter that you can use for this.
The answer to your question actually depends on whether or not your wireless printer is Bluetooth-enabled or Bluetooth-compatible. If it is Bluetooth-enabled, you should have no problem setting up a connection between your two devices. If it is Bluetooth-compatible, you will need to purchase the applicable adapter or dongle for it before you can set up a connection. If it is neither Bluetooth-enabled nor Bluetooth-compatible, your Samsung Galaxy S will not work with it.
Wireless surround sounds plays through a medium of adapter such as bluetooth to produce high efficient output resulting in high surround sound effect.
No! It does not have an inbuilt bluetooth.
your laptop or desktop has to have bluetooth to be able to use it you shoud just buy a wirless mouse with an usb adapter if you computer or laptop doesnt have bluetooth enabled
What you need to do is view your wired and wireless connections in the control panel, then change your adapters properties to share its connections with other computers. Then, setup the wireless adapter for ad-hoc and connect the computer of your choice, and viola.
Yes, although if someone is not talking to you, the adapter will end the call after a while.
really depends on the type of keyboard you get there is ones that work on the 2.4GHz frequency that has some sort of USB adapter/dongle there are some Bluetooth keyboard which use either your devices built in Bluetooth or again connects to a Bluetooth Adapter/Dongle older style "wireless" keyboards used radio frequency there was normally a USB Dongle with a cord that you would put on the desk or in sight of the keyboard because they would have to "see" each other
you buy the wireless adapter