2.4GHz Bluetooth v2.0 USB Dongle Adapter EDR for Windows Vista/XP/2000

2.4GHz Bluetooth v2.0 USB Dongle Adapter EDR for Windows Vista/XP/2000

  • Wireless data connectivity between computers and Bluetooth enabled devices such as cell phones, PDAs, printers, headsets and more
  • Bluetooth V2.0 + EDR (Enhanced Data Rate). USB 2.0 high speed, backward-compatible with Bluetooth 1.x
  • Working distance up to 20 meters with no obstructions
  • Data Transfer Rate up to 3Mbps
  • Compatible with MacOS, Linux, Windows Vista 32/XP/2000/Me/98

Get more done with the power of Bluetooth! Transfer files between your computer and any Bluetooth-enabled devices, such as cell phones, PDAs, printers, headsets, and more. Create on-the-fly networks between two computers w/ Bluetooth. This simple USB adapter acts as an antenna for your computer, giving it Bluetooth capability.
Package includes Bluetooth dongle & software installation CD.,br/>
This bluetooth dongle comes with a full version of BlueSoleil software and drivers. However, the software is not licensed to every type and model of hardware that is capable of using Bluetooth. If the software detects hardware that does not match the license keys it expects, then the software will impose a 5MB data transfer limitation. To overcome that

Rating: (out of 100 reviews)

List Price: $ 29.99

Price: $ 0.59

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5 Responses to 2.4GHz Bluetooth v2.0 USB Dongle Adapter EDR for Windows Vista/XP/2000

  1. Andrea L. Polk

    Review from Andrea L. Polk for the 2.4GHz Bluetooth v2.0 USB Dongle Adapter EDR for Windows Vista/XP/2000
    The Rating is:
    I purchased this item to transfer video and photos from my Nokia cell phone. I installed it on my XP desktop, using the included CD drivers for the install. No upgrades were needed and the device picked up the signal from the Nokia immediately. I uploaded my files easily and the signal was great within about a 5′ range.

    Note that when you are prompted for a ‘key’, it’s any series of numbers you put in. Then simply put the same password into the other bluetooth enabled device and you’ll be good to go.

    Vista recognized this device immediately and had drivers for it. No need to use the driver CD to install.

    I was going to pay HP extra to install a bluetooth option, but I would have overpaid. This is the cheapest, most effective option you can buy and the seller got it to me quick. Don’t hesitate to buy it.

  2. Mgamerz

    Review from Mgamerz for the 2.4GHz Bluetooth v2.0 USB Dongle Adapter EDR for Windows Vista/XP/2000
    The Rating is:
    (Forward: I’m Mike, Jane’s son, and I’m 16 and somewhat computer savvy.)

    This overall, is a great product.

    It comes in a ~very~ generic package, so I assumed this was a generic-like bluetooth adapter (It is very generic). It comes with a CD, and the bluetooth adapter in the picture. It’s bluetooth 2.0 like it says, but it’s USB 1.1, which was kind of a bummer… But Bluetooth 2.0 has 3Mbps transfer speed and USB 1.1 is 12Mbps, so even if it is 2.0, it won’t make a difference.

    The plastic casing on the adapter is kinda weak. And it wiggles a bit, so that kind of bugged me. I don’t know if the CD is actually worth using because I am using Ubuntu 8.04. I’m not even close to a linux expert, so it took me about an hour and a half to get my phone connected and get my wireless headphones working. The transfer speed to the phone is fast, a good 20KB/S at the least (No transfer speed shown on Bluetooth communications) Took about a minute for 5.25 Megabytes.

    Using the A2DP audio profile (High Quality Sound for the Bluetooth bandwidth), my headphones sound just as good as a $25 pair of wired headphones.

    As for distance, I can walk around my whole house and only in one spot did I have a break, but the audio quality dropped the farther i got away but I never was disconnected (It was about 40 feet with 2-3 walls at all times).

    Overall this is a good deal, I would recommend buying it if you want a cheap and decent bluetooth adapter. But the packaging indicated no company name at all anywhere, so that’s a mark off.

    Other than that, I would buy it.

    It’s REALLY great for transferring files to your phone. Yes, it is slow, but it’s really annoying to have to use a cable.

    REVIEW EDIT: After like 6 or 7 months of use, the plastic that holds the dongle together broke apart into half. A quick and easy fix is just to use clear tape and tape it back together, and mine was good as new. Still working great, over a year later.

  3. D. Barker

    Review from D. Barker for the 2.4GHz Bluetooth v2.0 USB Dongle Adapter EDR for Windows Vista/XP/2000
    The Rating is:
    Bargain Cell appears to be removing the CDs from their dongle clamshells. I ordered 4 dongles and none had the CD included. The drivers are not parts of Vista’s online driver collection. No matching driver can be found online. This results in the dongles being useless and BargainCell keeping their S&H fee.

  4. James Chase

    Review from James Chase for the 2.4GHz Bluetooth v2.0 USB Dongle Adapter EDR for Windows Vista/XP/2000
    The Rating is:
    I bought this primarily to use with Skype on Windows Vista. The shipping took about a week to get to me, which isn’t too bad.

    It comes with IVT BlueSoleil version 2.7 which is outdated (the newest one is 6.2). I initially had problems getting this to work with Skype and my bluetooth headset, so I tried the newest version of BlueSoleil. This actually worked worse (kept saying my microphone wasn’t configured correctly in skype), so I went back to the version included with the USB Bluetooth Adapter. The 2nd time I installed it, I got it to work without too much trouble. The program isn’t entirely obvious to use if you’ve never dealt with bluetooth. The scanning for bluetooth devices and pairing between the adapter and your bluetooth device makes sense, but once it is recognized you should be sure to search the device for services so that you can enable the device to do whatever it is that it is supposed to do.

    The BlueSoleil program does interface with skype so that you can answer and hang up your calls using your headset (if supported on the headset).

    I found the range to be not good despite what other say. I can’t walk much further than about 6 feet from my computer before it starts to get crackly and bad reception. This may be because my computer is in a corner and when I walk away the signal has to travel through a wall. I have not tried it in a wide open scenario so I cannot comment on that. But it definitely does not go through walls very well!

    In general (and this may apply more directly to my headset [plantronics 520] than to the receiver) the sound quality is good but there is definitely some static/crackling every once in awhile. So it’s not really a clean sound/connection. It’s usually not enough to bother me or the other party and generally people say I sound clear using the device.

    If I were to do it all again, I think I would buy a higher quality adapter so that I can be sure the crackling/static is not the fault of my bluetooth adapter. For what it’s worth the crackling is also present on when connected to my cell phone so it could be my headset’s fault.

    I have to say bluetooth is a pretty disappointing technology and is not well implemented with current Windows Operating Systems in that it requires third party software and is not simply plug and play.

    But for $5, you can’t really go wrong with this product.

  5. Luc Belec

    Review from Luc Belec for the 2.4GHz Bluetooth v2.0 USB Dongle Adapter EDR for Windows Vista/XP/2000
    The Rating is:
    I did get this “thing” to have a headset, keyboard and a mouse on a PC who is at 20 feet from me (on a big screen). Well this PC is a Vista 64bits. The software v-2 who come with-it doesn’t work on this version of vista, I did need to download the version 6. This version is a 15 days trial and I need to pay 30$ (20 euro…) to unlock-it. I did install the trial program, it looks good but I can’t make work more than one device at the time. The software seam to be capable but…

    Once I did get the keyboard and the mouse going for less than 5 minutes. As soon I try to add the headset, everything went down. After 3 hrs, reinstalling the software, crashing the PC (who never did crash before) also about 20 times the program did freeze… then I give-up on this device and try-the set-up on my laptop with internal Bluetooth. The keyboard, the mouse, the headset, the cell and the I-pod work all together, in less than 5 minutes…

    This is a piece of “work “looks good on paper, look good on the screen but I give-up on it. How they think I will get a 30$ software when the device doesn’t work…

    Also, I did find-out, this device is design to work after windows is running and doesn’t initialize itself when you reboot. You need a lease another pointing device to establish the connections and also you need a other keyboard to put your password to log-in… I guess I have to do some homework to figure if there some devices who work at windows start-up…

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