Fast Pair is Android's answer to Apple's effortless AirPods pairing
Apple users are quickly growing accustomed to
effortless wireless pairing between the iPhone (or Mac computers) and
AirPods, but Google has been working on something that should remove at
least some frustration from connecting Bluetooth gadgets to
Android phones. Some speakers and headphones let you speed up the
pairing process with NFC, which is pretty convenient, but now devices
running Android 6.0 and above will get yet another, even better option: Fast PairThis new approach uses Bluetooth Low Energy and your
Android phone’s location to automatically discover Bluetooth accessories
in close proximity and then automatically connect with a tap. It even
shows a picture of the product you’re using. Sound familiar?
When you’ve got a Fast Pair-enabled device nearby (and
there are less than a handful of them to start), your Android smartphone
will fetch the device's product image, product name, and companion app —
if one exists — from Google’s servers. Once you hit connect, you should
see a confirmation when pairing is successful. Then, Android will offer
to download the accessory’s companion app. (Noise-cancelling headphones
often have apps to configure , as do some speakers.)
The actual pairing process still uses “classic
Bluetooth,” so Google isn’t making any claims about improved connection
reliability. But Bluetooth 5 should help in that regard as more phones
and headphones, speakers, etc. are released with it.
This is definitely the way things should be — especially
as more and more Android phones lose the headphone jack. Bravo, Google.
And it’s great to see that support extends back to Android Marshmallow.
But for Fast Pair to become a widespread Android convenience, accessory
makers will need to adopt the feature. It’s not a thing that will just
work immediately for all of your existing Bluetooth gadgets. To do that,
they can register with Google here.
Supported headphones at launch include Google’s Pixel
Buds, Libratone's Q Adapt On-Ear, and Plantronics Voyager 8200-series
wireless headsets. The only thing users need to do is have the latest
version of Google Play Services (11.7) installed, which is rolling out
over the coming days and weeks.
The article was published on : theverge
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