Bluetooth Driver Update For Mac Osx

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I have installed the Windows 10 Technical Preview on my mid-2011 MacBook Pro 13-inch. I had been running Windows 7 with no problems. The installation had been done using Apple's BootCamp software. The problem is that, in Windows 10 Device Manager, my Bluetooth USB Host Controller (found in 'Other Devices') shows that no drivers are installed.

Worse yet, when I click on Properties for the device, I get: The drivers for this device are not installed. Driver for hp laserjet p1102 mac. (Code 28) There are no compatible drivers for this device. To find a driver for this device, click Update Driver. And, of course, no bluetooth radios show up in the Device Manager. Note that all of this was working perfectly in Windows 7. Does anyone have any ideas?

Bluetooth 1.5 for Mac OS X provides support for Bluetooth enabled headsets which may be used with iChat AV 2.1 public beta or later. In addition, the Bluetooth 1.5 update adds the ability to print to supported Bluetooth enabled printers.

So this may be a little risky, but. There's a freeware app called Bluetooth Driver Installer. I just ran 1.0.1.98 Beta 64-bit on Windows 10 Professional 10240 (presumably RTM). Assuming this app is safe (I crossed my fingers), it does create a restore point before it starts installing, so if it screws anything up, you should be able to roll back.

Driver

The first time I ran it, it failed because it couldn't write to C: Windows inf bth.inf. Here's a workaround. Browse to the file, right click, click Properties. On the 'Security' tab, click 'Advanced'. 'Owner' should show 'TrustedInstaller'.

Change it to your username. Hit OK, OK, OK, etc. A few times to get out of the properties dialog. Then pull up the properties on it again, go back to the 'Security' tab. Hit 'Edit' and add 'Everyone' - Full Control. Now the installer works. In Device Manager, it shows up under the Bluetooth sub-tree as 'Microsoft Bluetooth Enumerator', 'Microsoft Bluetooth LE Enumerator', and 'My new generic Bluetooth adapter'.

At this point, you can change the name of your device, helpful if you plan on having multiple Chromecasts throughout your house. In a matter of seconds, you should see a message on your television that says you are ready to cast. Chromecast for mac. The Chromecast will now attempt to successfully connect to your network.

Afterwards, I recommend putting all the bth.inf permissions back to the way they were. Edit the permissions again and remove the 'Everyone' permission you created.

Then click 'Advanced'. Click 'Change' next to the Owner. You have to type in 'NT Service TrustedInstaller' (this won't show up in search results, so just type/copy+paste it w/o the 's). Hit OK a bunch of times and you're all set.

I just did this a few minutes ago so I don't know whether Windows 10 will undo the modifications one day. Also sfc /scannow may not like it. So this may be a little risky, but. There's a freeware app called Bluetooth Driver Installer. I just ran 1.0.1.98 Beta 64-bit on Windows 10 Professional 10240 (presumably RTM). Assuming this app is safe (I crossed my fingers), it does create a restore point before it starts installing, so if it screws anything up, you should be able to roll back. The first time I ran it, it failed because it couldn't write to C: Windows inf bth.inf.

Here's a workaround. Browse to the file, right click, click Properties.

On the 'Security' tab, click 'Advanced'. 'Owner' should show 'TrustedInstaller'. Change it to your username. Hit OK, OK, OK, etc. A few times to get out of the properties dialog. Then pull up the properties on it again, go back to the 'Security' tab.

Hit 'Edit' and add 'Everyone' - Full Control. Now the installer works.

In Device Manager, it shows up under the Bluetooth sub-tree as 'Microsoft Bluetooth Enumerator', 'Microsoft Bluetooth LE Enumerator', and 'My new generic Bluetooth adapter'. Afterwards, I recommend putting all the bth.inf permissions back to the way they were.

Edit the permissions again and remove the 'Everyone' permission you created. Then click 'Advanced'. Click 'Change' next to the Owner. You have to type in 'NT Service TrustedInstaller' (this won't show up in search results, so just type/copy+paste it w/o the 's). Hit OK a bunch of times and you're all set. I just did this a few minutes ago so I don't know whether Windows 10 will undo the modifications one day.

Also sfc /scannow may not like it. Apple Footer • This site contains user submitted content, comments and opinions and is for informational purposes only.