• AirPods: priority device list

    From Ammammata@ammammata@tiscali.it to comp.mobile.ipad on Tue Jan 28 10:11:21 2025
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.ipad

    AirPods are connected to the iPhone, the iPad and the computer

    How can I set a priority device list when all of them are ON in the
    same room?
    --
    /-\ /\/\ /\/\ /-\ /\/\ /\/\ /-\ T /-\
    -=- -=- -=- -=- -=- -=- -=- -=- - -=-
    ........... [ al lavoro ] ...........
    --- Synchronet 3.20c-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Chris@ithinkiam@gmail.com to comp.mobile.ipad on Fri Jan 31 08:58:52 2025
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.ipad

    Ammammata <ammammata@tiscali.it> wrote:
    AirPods are connected to the iPhone, the iPad and the computer

    How can I set a priority device list when all of them are ON in the
    same room?

    You can't. This is a huge weakness of bluetooth on Apple.

    Heading home from work with my mac, asleep in my backpack, and wanting to listen to music on my phone, my headphones of course always choose to
    connect to my mac rather the iphone in my hand. smdh.

    --- Synchronet 3.20c-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Tyrone@none@none.none to comp.mobile.ipad on Fri Jan 31 14:28:21 2025
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.ipad

    On Jan 31, 2025 at 3:58:52 AM EST, "Chris" <ithinkiam@gmail.com> wrote:

    Ammammata <ammammata@tiscali.it> wrote:
    AirPods are connected to the iPhone, the iPad and the computer

    How can I set a priority device list when all of them are ON in the
    same room?

    You can't. This is a huge weakness of bluetooth on Apple.

    Heading home from work with my mac, asleep in my backpack, and wanting to listen to music on my phone, my headphones of course always choose to
    connect to my mac rather the iphone in my hand. smdh.

    I never have this problem. I don't understand why people leave Bluetooth on
    all the time on everything. Turn them all off, then turn on Bluetooth on the one you want to use.

    Self-created problem solved.

    Why not have all of your TVs, radios, iPads/phones/whatever all on and all playing various shows/movies/music and then ask "How do I choose which one to listen to?".

    Why not have every light in your house on all the time and then ask "Why can't I sleep at night?"

    The answer in each case is obvious.

    I have 2 Macs, 2 iPhones, 3 iPod Touchs and more iPads than you can imagine. Leaving Bluetooth on all the time on all of them is not needed (and is an
    extra battery drain) and would create a house of chaos.

    Self-created problem.

    Part of my routine is that after every iOS update I turn Bluetooth off. Why Apple thinks it needs to be on 24/7/365 is a mystery to me. That it gets turned on after every iOS update is intrusive and irritating. Updates should not change ANY of my settings.
    --- Synchronet 3.20c-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Chris@ithinkiam@gmail.com to comp.mobile.ipad on Sat Feb 1 11:26:19 2025
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.ipad

    Tyrone <none@none.none> wrote:
    On Jan 31, 2025 at 3:58:52 AM EST, "Chris" <ithinkiam@gmail.com> wrote:

    Ammammata <ammammata@tiscali.it> wrote:
    AirPods are connected to the iPhone, the iPad and the computer

    How can I set a priority device list when all of them are ON in the
    same room?

    You can't. This is a huge weakness of bluetooth on Apple.

    Heading home from work with my mac, asleep in my backpack, and wanting to
    listen to music on my phone, my headphones of course always choose to
    connect to my mac rather the iphone in my hand. smdh.

    I never have this problem. I don't understand why people leave Bluetooth on all the time on everything. Turn them all off, then turn on Bluetooth on the one you want to use.

    Bluetooth is required for connectivity to mice, keyboards and pencils.

    I should be able to shut my MBP without first remembering to turn various things off. That's the beauty of macOS, simplicity.

    Self-created problem solved.

    Why not have all of your TVs, radios, iPads/phones/whatever all on and all playing various shows/movies/music and then ask "How do I choose which one to listen to?".

    Why not have every light in your house on all the time and then ask "Why can't
    I sleep at night?"

    Not even remotely comparable.

    The answer in each case is obvious.

    I have 2 Macs, 2 iPhones, 3 iPod Touchs and more iPads than you can imagine. Leaving Bluetooth on all the time on all of them is not needed (and is an extra battery drain) and would create a house of chaos.

    The battery drain of BT LE is negligible. Probably only makes minutes'
    worth of difference in a day.

    Self-created problem.

    Part of my routine is that after every iOS update I turn Bluetooth off. Why Apple thinks it needs to be on 24/7/365 is a mystery to me. That it gets turned on after every iOS update is intrusive and irritating. Updates should not change ANY of my settings.

    The FindMy network is dependent on it. You've lost all ability to recover
    lost or stolen devices. One of the great strengths of the Apple ecosystem.


    --- Synchronet 3.20c-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Ammammata@ammammata@tiscali.it to comp.mobile.ipad on Mon Feb 3 14:16:54 2025
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.ipad

    Chris explained on 01/02/2025 :
    Bluetooth is required for connectivity to mice, keyboards and pencils.

    absolutely right, in fact this is the situation, without leaving out
    the car: the phone has bt enabled for the car, the computer for mouse
    and airpods (main device), the tablet for other things I don't remember
    right now
    --
    /-\ /\/\ /\/\ /-\ /\/\ /\/\ /-\ T /-\
    -=- -=- -=- -=- -=- -=- -=- -=- - -=-
    ........... [ al lavoro ] ...........
    --- Synchronet 3.20c-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Tyrone@none@none.none to comp.mobile.ipad on Tue Feb 4 02:06:19 2025
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.ipad

    On Feb 1, 2025 at 6:26:19 AM EST, "Chris" <ithinkiam@gmail.com> wrote:

    Tyrone <none@none.none> wrote:
    On Jan 31, 2025 at 3:58:52 AM EST, "Chris" <ithinkiam@gmail.com> wrote:

    Ammammata <ammammata@tiscali.it> wrote:
    AirPods are connected to the iPhone, the iPad and the computer

    How can I set a priority device list when all of them are ON in the
    same room?

    You can't. This is a huge weakness of bluetooth on Apple.

    Heading home from work with my mac, asleep in my backpack, and wanting to >>> listen to music on my phone, my headphones of course always choose to
    connect to my mac rather the iphone in my hand. smdh.

    I never have this problem. I don't understand why people leave Bluetooth on >> all the time on everything. Turn them all off, then turn on Bluetooth on the
    one you want to use.

    Bluetooth is required for connectivity to mice, keyboards and pencils.

    Unless your mouse and keyboard are USB. What use is a pencil on a Mac? No
    touch screen.

    I should be able to shut my MBP without first remembering to turn various things off. That's the beauty of macOS, simplicity.

    Not "various things". Just the one thing that is causing confusion. Its an icon right at the top of the screen. Bluetooth should not be on unless you
    are actively using it. Simple.

    Self-created problem solved.

    Why not have all of your TVs, radios, iPads/phones/whatever all on and all >> playing various shows/movies/music and then ask "How do I choose which one to
    listen to?".

    Why not have every light in your house on all the time and then ask "Why can't
    I sleep at night?"

    Not even remotely comparable.

    Exactly the same. Multiple things on when they don't need to be, causing confusion.

    The answer in each case is obvious.

    I have 2 Macs, 2 iPhones, 3 iPod Touchs and more iPads than you can imagine. >> Leaving Bluetooth on all the time on all of them is not needed (and is an
    extra battery drain) and would create a house of chaos.

    The battery drain of BT LE is negligible. Probably only makes minutes'
    worth of difference in a day.

    But its worth the seconds a day to turn it off when not being used AND to
    avoid the above confusion.

    Self-created problem.

    Part of my routine is that after every iOS update I turn Bluetooth off. Why >> Apple thinks it needs to be on 24/7/365 is a mystery to me. That it gets
    turned on after every iOS update is intrusive and irritating. Updates should
    not change ANY of my settings.

    The FindMy network is dependent on it.

    iPhones use cell phone connections for that. Everything else uses your
    in-house WiFi. Bluetooth only covers 20 feet or so. If your iPad/Mac/whatever is lost outside of your property or stolen, Bluetooth has no chance of finding it.

    You've lost all ability to recover lost or stolen devices. One of the great strengths of the Apple ecosystem.

    Nonsense.
    --- Synchronet 3.20c-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Chris@ithinkiam@gmail.com to comp.mobile.ipad on Tue Feb 4 09:00:58 2025
    From Newsgroup: comp.mobile.ipad

    Tyrone <none@none.none> wrote:
    On Feb 1, 2025 at 6:26:19 AM EST, "Chris" <ithinkiam@gmail.com> wrote:

    Tyrone <none@none.none> wrote:
    On Jan 31, 2025 at 3:58:52 AM EST, "Chris" <ithinkiam@gmail.com> wrote: >>>
    Ammammata <ammammata@tiscali.it> wrote:
    AirPods are connected to the iPhone, the iPad and the computer

    How can I set a priority device list when all of them are ON in the
    same room?

    You can't. This is a huge weakness of bluetooth on Apple.

    Heading home from work with my mac, asleep in my backpack, and wanting to >>>> listen to music on my phone, my headphones of course always choose to
    connect to my mac rather the iphone in my hand. smdh.

    I never have this problem. I don't understand why people leave Bluetooth on >>> all the time on everything. Turn them all off, then turn on Bluetooth on the
    one you want to use.

    Bluetooth is required for connectivity to mice, keyboards and pencils.

    Unless your mouse and keyboard are USB. What use is a pencil on a Mac? No touch screen.

    This is an ipad ng :p

    I should be able to shut my MBP without first remembering to turn various
    things off. That's the beauty of macOS, simplicity.

    Not "various things". Just the one thing that is causing confusion. Its an icon right at the top of the screen.

    No it isn't.

    Bluetooth should not be on unless you
    are actively using it. Simple.

    In your opinion. I actively use it all the time.

    The answer in each case is obvious.

    I have 2 Macs, 2 iPhones, 3 iPod Touchs and more iPads than you can imagine.
    Leaving Bluetooth on all the time on all of them is not needed (and is an >>> extra battery drain) and would create a house of chaos.

    The battery drain of BT LE is negligible. Probably only makes minutes'
    worth of difference in a day.

    But its worth the seconds a day to turn it off when not being used AND to avoid the above confusion.

    Except will cause additional confusion when the device you want working
    hasn't got BT enabled...

    Self-created problem.

    Part of my routine is that after every iOS update I turn Bluetooth off. Why >>> Apple thinks it needs to be on 24/7/365 is a mystery to me. That it gets >>> turned on after every iOS update is intrusive and irritating. Updates should
    not change ANY of my settings.

    The FindMy network is dependent on it.

    iPhones use cell phone connections for that.

    False. That would use way too much power/battery. FindMy even works when
    the phone is off.

    Everything else uses your
    in-house WiFi.

    Remind me how an AirTag uses wifi...?

    Bluetooth only covers 20 feet or so. If your iPad/Mac/whatever
    is lost outside of your property or stolen, Bluetooth has no chance of finding
    it.

    You need to read up on FindMy. https://www.howtogeek.com/725842/what-is-apples-find-my-network/

    You've lost all ability to recover lost or stolen devices. One of the great >> strengths of the Apple ecosystem.

    Nonsense.

    You are misinformed.



    --- Synchronet 3.20c-Linux NewsLink 1.2