F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Networks Bluetooth connection on an Eee PC with Windows 10 is feasible.

Bluetooth connection on an Eee PC with Windows 10 is feasible.

Bluetooth connection on an Eee PC with Windows 10 is feasible.

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Doggplant
Junior Member
22
01-15-2016, 10:47 AM
#1
I own an Eee Pc 1015PEM and ran Windows 10 now. I’m curious if it’s feasible to add Bluetooth after switching from Windows 7 to Windows 10. The product manual mentions Bluetooth support, but it wasn’t set up during installation. Since I’m unsure if it works now, I’d appreciate any advice or suggestions.
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Doggplant
01-15-2016, 10:47 AM #1

I own an Eee Pc 1015PEM and ran Windows 10 now. I’m curious if it’s feasible to add Bluetooth after switching from Windows 7 to Windows 10. The product manual mentions Bluetooth support, but it wasn’t set up during installation. Since I’m unsure if it works now, I’d appreciate any advice or suggestions.

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sacapatates
Posting Freak
843
01-15-2016, 12:16 PM
#2
Bluetooth could have been an optional feature not included in your device. I’m unsure if it’s beneficial to add it internally, particularly for a low-end model, so I suggest using a USB Bluetooth adapter instead.
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sacapatates
01-15-2016, 12:16 PM #2

Bluetooth could have been an optional feature not included in your device. I’m unsure if it’s beneficial to add it internally, particularly for a low-end model, so I suggest using a USB Bluetooth adapter instead.

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Xxbabygirl1xX
Junior Member
1
01-23-2016, 11:24 AM
#3
Based on your search, Bluetooth 3.0 was likely included with the product. For better compatibility, consider a USB adapter that supports newer Bluetooth versions. Also, check how Windows 10 performs on it.
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Xxbabygirl1xX
01-23-2016, 11:24 AM #3

Based on your search, Bluetooth 3.0 was likely included with the product. For better compatibility, consider a USB adapter that supports newer Bluetooth versions. Also, check how Windows 10 performs on it.

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WomboDzn
Member
130
01-27-2016, 07:34 AM
#4
I have Win10 on my old ASUS T100 and I can safely say, very painfully slow. Haven't touched it in years because its pretty much unusable on the modern web, although perhaps a bit more usable if the RAM could be upgraded and I wasn't limited to eMMC storage. I hate e-waste but I'd really be looking for just about any used laptop that will be infinitely faster than this unless you have a very specific use case. The Raspberry Pi could run rings around it.
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WomboDzn
01-27-2016, 07:34 AM #4

I have Win10 on my old ASUS T100 and I can safely say, very painfully slow. Haven't touched it in years because its pretty much unusable on the modern web, although perhaps a bit more usable if the RAM could be upgraded and I wasn't limited to eMMC storage. I hate e-waste but I'd really be looking for just about any used laptop that will be infinitely faster than this unless you have a very specific use case. The Raspberry Pi could run rings around it.

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Dnomge
Member
77
01-27-2016, 07:49 PM
#5
It may work fine on Chrome OS.
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Dnomge
01-27-2016, 07:49 PM #5

It may work fine on Chrome OS.

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Boba999
Member
130
01-28-2016, 07:43 AM
#6
OK is a flexible concept, yet Android performed better on the T100 compared to Windows. As unofficial, it lacked a stable release.
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Boba999
01-28-2016, 07:43 AM #6

OK is a flexible concept, yet Android performed better on the T100 compared to Windows. As unofficial, it lacked a stable release.