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Frustrated with your Bluetooth? How multipoint works - and why it sometimes won't

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Why This Matters

Bluetooth multipoint is a popular feature that allows headphones to connect to multiple devices simultaneously, enhancing user convenience. However, since it is not an official Bluetooth standard, its implementation varies across manufacturers and can lead to unreliable connections. The transition to LE Audio offers potential improvements, but consumers should be aware of the current limitations of multipoint technology.

Key Takeaways

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ZDNET's key takeaways

Bluetooth dual device connectivity, aka "multipoint," isn't an official feature or spec.

It's an application of Bluetooth technologies, and each manufacturer wields it differently.

Further migration from Bluetooth Classic to LE Audio promises improvements.

Bluetooth multipoint is a key selling point used by headphone and earbud manufacturers to entice consumers. This feature allows one pair of headphones to maintain individual connections with two (sometimes three) devices and switch audio between them without manually unpairing and re-pairing devices.

Also: What is Bluetooth 6.0? How the latest standard fixes audio problems we'd learned to live with

However, this feature can be unreliable, disconnecting from the device you want to stay connected to or injecting audio from the device you don't want to hear. There's a reason for this inconsistent behavior: multipoint, as presented to consumers, isn't an official feature or specification of Bluetooth. The term is mostly marketing-speak.

I spoke with Henry Wong, director of market development at Bluetooth SIG, to understand how multipoint works, how it doesn't, and whether further shifts from Bluetooth Classic to LE Audio can address its shortcomings.

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