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Stop Switching Devices Manually: Your Guide to Multipoint Bluetooth Audio

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Jumping between digital devices has become a necessary part of many people's daily lives, whether you're keeping up with text alerts or ensuring you don't miss an important call while in a Zoom meeting on your laptop.

Multipoint Bluetooth was designed to solve the problem of having to disconnect or enter the Bluetooth menu each time you want your headset to connect to a different device. It helps you stay notified of incoming calls, email or messaging notifications, letting you conveniently bounce between personal and professional without interrupting your task.

Introduced in 2010 as part of Bluetooth 4.0, advanced multipoint allows two devices to be connected simultaneously to your audio headset, enabling you to switch between them. For several years, the feature was glitchy, unreliable and not widely supported, particularly for true-wireless earbuds. But that's changing.

Recent hardware and software advances have vastly improved multipoint's stability and power consumption, and the feature is now available on many wireless headphones and true-wireless earbuds, including those from Bose, which was slow to adopt the feature due to reliability concerns.

Apple and Google support systems that behave similarly to multipoint -- automatic device switching -- which swaps source devices when it detects playback on your target device. The caveat is that they are technically fast auto-pairing systems rather than simultaneously connecting two devices, and you must be signed in to the same Apple ID or Google account on both devices for this function to work.

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The advantages and limitations of multipoint Bluetooth

When multiple devices are within the same digital ecosystem -- Apple, Samsung or Google -- and you're signed into the same account on them, you get smoother (and often automatic) switching, whether it's via Apple's Handoff, Google's Fast Pair or actual multipoint Bluetooth.

If, for example, you're swapping between your Apple iPad and your Android smartphone, you'll usually have to pause one device manually (semi-automatic switching) before audio will switch over, though you still get the benefit of not having to do the Bluetooth disconnect/connect mambo.

Multipoint is not a universal feature and its performance can vary depending on the specifical model. Multipoint Bluetooth was (and still is) easier to implement on standard wireless headphones because the earcups are connected via a single main Bluetooth connection. True-wireless earbuds are more complex since the left and right earbuds have to be wirelessly synced while avoiding interference issues, and a third wireless channel (and more processing power) is required for multipoint pairing.

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