🔗 Unlock wireless freedom in a snap!
The Plantronics BT600 Network Adapter is a compact, external USB Bluetooth adapter that adds wireless connectivity to desktops and notebooks without internal installation. Supporting 802.11abg wireless standards, it offers a plug-and-play solution weighing only 0.64 ounces, making it an effortless upgrade for any professional seeking reliable and flexible connectivity.
Wireless Type | 802.11abg |
Brand | Plantronics |
Series | BT600 |
Item model number | 205250-01 |
Item Weight | 0.64 ounces |
Product Dimensions | 4.2 x 3 x 1.9 inches |
Item Dimensions LxWxH | 4.2 x 3 x 1.9 inches |
Color | black |
Manufacturer | Plantronics |
ASIN | B017OF723Q |
Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
Date First Available | November 6, 2015 |
C**O
Worked perfected with my BT600 headset!
I lost the USB connector for my headset and this one is exactly the same as the one I had before. It was very easy to resync, just pushed a tiny button on the side of the usb and put the headset in paring mode, worked like a charm!
A**L
Good sound--darned good--particularly in rounding-out the low-end of the audio ...
I purchased this li'l device ahead of receiving a set of Plantronics BackBeat PRO 2 Special Edition wireless headphones that I finally pulled the trigger on. It sat in my desk drawer, waiting for the headphones to arrive, while I set up my computer with a number of sound output options and bluetooth adapters to test the headphones with, once they got here (integrated motherboard sound, USB soundcard, PCIe sound card, and several types of analog input bluetooth transmitters).D-Day arrived, and I charged the headphones, and used a 26.5 minute .flac file for the musical selection to test-out direct connections to each different sound hardware output that I had configured on my machine. Good sound--darned good--particularly in rounding-out the low-end of the audio spectrum. The headphones are definite keepers. The sound processors that I have configured with this computer all produced very good sound, and the stack ranking falls out with the PCIe card leading the pack, and the USB sound card coming in just about neck-and-neck with the motherboard integrated sound; with the nod going to the USB sound card, which is 5 years newer than the sound hardware on the motherboard.With my baseline established, it's onward to the testing of the various means of routing sound through some bluetooth audio transmitters...I disabled my motherboard sound hardware in BIOS setup, and bootstrapped the OS (Debian Linux 9.4), then plugged the BT-600 into a rear USB 3.0 connector. After logging-in, I found the BT-600 detected by the OS as "Plantronics BT600 Analog Stereo". 'LSUSB -v' delivers more information than most folks want, but I saw what I wanted to see at Bus 010 Device 005: ID 047f:02f7: Debian was more than well acquainted with the device, and knows what to do with it. Suffice it to say that it is detected as a USB-connected soundcard, and the bluetooth interface is external to the OS entirely--your bluetooth receivers are the only things that have to worry about listening to what comes out of the soundcard.I skipped testing against the motherboard sound hardware, as well as the USB soundcard, and stuck with using the PCIe soundcard, routed through the various bluetooth transmitters that I had lined-up for comparison. This made it easy for me because, all I had to do was to pair the headphones with one transmitter, then with the BT-600, and switch between the two in my Master Channel Selection pane. I went through all 8 devices (7 bluetooth transmitters plus the BT-600) and was surprised to find that the BT-600, talking to the Plantronics headphones, was nearly on par with a direct connection between the PCIe soundcard and the headphones, and blew every one of the bluetooth audio transmitters that I tested it against out of the water.The .flac that I used for testing / comparison is a very full-range composition that contains melodic vocal performances in Sanskrit. Poor performance from audio hardware usually means that the nuances of the language are lost. In such cases, it's easy to mistake the exact pronunciation of the words in the performance. With this device, I am pleasantly surprised to find that all aspects of the sung words are perfectly reproduced, leaving no mistake as to the content of the performance.I honestly am VERY impressed with this little thing, and will be getting more to pop into the other computers that I use on a daily basis.Now, the BT-600 is not supplied with the specific headphones I purchased (Plantronics BackBeat PRO 2 Special Edition) but functions exactly as it is supposed to, offering red, blue and violet indicators, as appropriate to the mode of operation at any instant.For those wishing to obtain additional documentation on this product, you may want to visit the Plantronics website and search up the Getting Started guide for this product (Amazon won't permit me to post the link to help you out finding it, but it does exist).
C**N
Works Great On Linux
As a Linux user you always have to be mindful of compatibility and whether it will require significant work and hacks to function. You are wasting your time if you attempt to connect a plantronics headset to Linux. This dongle is perfect and works out of the box. The color coded bands really help while lecturing my class on Zoom. It even changes color when earpiece is on mute. It is expensive, but nothing else will work as well. Also, the charging case has a slot for the dongle. Excellent design.
T**N
Ordered to be able to link Polycom plantronics earpiece.
Ordered to be able to link Polycom plantronics earpiece to my PC which does not have Bluetooth card. Works great. Just like usb dongle for mouse and keyboard. Connected to earpiece right away, but I don’t find embedded software to choose other devices or control the link. I guess it lets my pc onboard software pick it up(?)
W**C
Good buy and works well
Works nice on my office laptop. Sound is good only the reach is not as strong as I expected. That’s why I didn’t give the full score.
T**D
Brilliant option for using BT headset for UC on a PC
This works brilliantly to allow my to use by Plantronics Legend BT headset with the PC so that I can to Skype and Jabber calls. It even turns red when I hit the mute button on the headset. To pair you need to press a very small pairing button on the device. Once you find that and put in pairing mode, the pairing process completes seamlessly. My only complaint about this device is the price -- $50+ is too high for what this does, even though it does it very well.
M**N
Complete Waste Of Money
I paid about $60 for this so my Plantronics Voyager 5220 headset would properly interact with Microsoft Teams (like it says it will). It doesn't. Even when I download the Plantronics Hub app to ensure it is synched with the headset, the Mute doesn't work, I can't disconnect a Teams call using the button on the headset, and.... most importantly to me... When I record a Microsoft Teams video call/demo/etc., it does NOT RECORD ANY SYSTEM AUDIO!!! Only my microphone. So... I attend a meeting/training and am responsible for recording the video call, and all you can hear is me occasionally saying "okay", "good point", etc. It does not record the actual system audio (people on the call, speaker, other people's questions, etc.)!!! What a complete waste of money!! I want a refund ASAP.
P**R
Saved my plantronics headset
Wasted hours trying to get a Plantronics Backbeat Sense headset working on my windows 7 laptop. My laptop DOES support bluetooth audio & headset profiles, but the Plantronics headset did not work with it, presumably because of lousy drivers.I finally got this device and it made the headset work perfectly the minute I installed this.In addition to finally making the headset "just work", it has a nice light.- The light is blue when the headset is on, so it's easy to see if you forgot to turn off the headset (and it's not near your PC).- The light is red when you have muted your mic in the headset during a call.That light is surprisingly helpful.Basically with this dongle sitting in your laptop, the headset communicates with the bluetooth radios inside this dongle rather than with the radios inside the laptop. It has good range - I can walk 2-3 rooms away around corners and still get reception, and as far as I can tell does not interfere with anything despite other bluetooth/wifi devices in the house.Would have returned the headset if not for this.
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