

Unpair and repair headphones to your device Try disconnecting your Bluetooth headphones from any other devices than the one you are meeting on Zoom with. Sometimes, you may hear others, but other participants can't hear your microphone. Disconnect Bluetooth headphones from all other devicesīluetooth headphones may not work properly if they are connected to multiple devices. To prevent this from happening, pause or close any other apps using your device's audio. With Bluetooth connected, if other apps besides Zoom play audio during a Zoom meeting (such as an incoming phone call or music streaming), Zoom will stop the meeting’s audio and try to mute.

Learn how to test your audio settings in Zoom. In addition to connecting your headphones to your device, you can select your Bluetooth headphones in Zoom’s settings before a meeting to make sure they’re connected with Zoom or test the audio in a test meeting. Zoom may automatically connect to your device’s default speakers and microphone. How to troubleshoot Bluetooth headphones not working with Zoom Test audio settings in Zoom Try disconnecting your headphones from your device, then re-connect them while in the meeting or continue to troubleshoot other solutions. Note: If you don't see the speaker icon with the Bluetooth logo, your headphones aren't connected.

There’s a small catch, however: Microsoft considers this to be a preview, so the new Phone Link app with support for iOS will only be available for Windows Insiders (regardless of what test channel they choose) and only a small percentage of eligible users will receive the update. Phone Link now connects to the iPhone, and you’ll have the option of managing your iPhone contacts, placing and receiving calls, and sending texts via the Windows Phone Link app. Now, however, Microsoft has taken its first steps to remedy that. Microsoft’s ambitions to connect the iPhone via Phone Link ( once called Your Phone) went unfulfilled, and Microsoft has never said exactly why. (At the same time, Microsoft devoted considerable resources toward developing mobile apps for both platforms.) However, Microsoft found much greater success connecting to the more open Android platform, with an emphasis on Samsung phones.

When Microsoft pulled the plug on Windows Phone in 2019, the company had a goal: connect Windows PCs to Android phones and iPhones to try to bridge the gap between phone and PC.
