You are a desktop administrator for your company. A certifyme user reports that he is unable to use his Bluetooth-enabled mobile phone with his Bluetooth-enabled Windows XP Professional computer. He is trying to play audio from the phone through the speakers on his computer. You verify that other Bluetooth devices work properly with the user�s computer. You test the speakers to make sure they are in working order. You also verify that the mobile phone can send output to a computer. You then discover that the phone cannot detect the computer. You need to ensure that the user can use the phone with his computer. What should you do?
A.
Place the phone in Bluetooth discovery mode.
B.
Place the user�s computer in Bluetooth discovery mode.
C.
Add the phone and the computer to the same Bluetooth Personal Area Network (PAN).
D.
Install mobile phone synchronization software on the user�s computer.
Explanation:
Typically, your Bluetooth-enabled computer will discover other devices. Therefore, you only have to turn on the Turn discovery on option when your computer acts as a device. For example, you might want to turn on this option when your computer is connected to another computer by a Personal Area Network
(PAN). When computers are connected by a PAN, one of the computers must have discovery turned on. By default, discovery is not turned on in Windows XP SP2, because a discoverable Bluetooth device may be less secure than a device that is not discoverable. We recommend that you keep the Turn discovery on check box cleared unless you want another Bluetooth device to discover the computer. When the connection is complete, the Add Device Wizard turns off discovery automatically.