Honda Bluetooth connection method:
Step 1: Turn on your car phone and then open the application center. Currently, there are two versions, one is the version when you first bought the car, and the other is the interface upgraded to the championship version. In order to make it easier for everyone to identify, or if you find it inconvenient to operate, the style and position of the "phone" icon in the application center of the two interfaces are marked below.
Step 2: After clicking "Phone", the following picture will appear. Take out your mobile phone. The mobile phone introduced here is Apple. Enter the operation interface of the call center and click "Scan mobile phone". ".
Step 3: After scanning the phone, a list of nearby Bluetooth enabled phones will appear. You can find the name of your phone’s Bluetooth device for pairing and searching. Click the blue icon "Connect" on the right side of the car, and your phone will receive a message requesting Bluetooth pairing. There will be the name of the device requested to be paired.
Step 4: After clicking Confirm on your phone, the words "Paired" will appear on your car-machine interface. If you no longer want to connect, just click "Cancel Pairing". Of course, after your phone is paired successfully, you can just click "Yes".
Finally, use your mobile phone to open the music player.
Bluetooth (Bluetooth?): It is a wireless technology standard that enables short-distance data exchange between fixed devices, mobile devices and building personal area networks (UHF using the ISM band of 2.4~2.485GHz radio waves). Bluetooth technology was originally created by telecommunications giant Ericsson in 1994 as an alternative to RS232 data lines. Bluetooth can connect multiple devices, overcoming the problem of data synchronization.
Today Bluetooth is managed by the Bluetooth Special Interest Group (SIG). The Bluetooth Technology Alliance has more than 25,000 member companies around the world, which are distributed in multiple fields such as telecommunications, computers, networks, and consumer electronics. The IEEE listed Bluetooth technology as IEEE 802.15.1, but that standard is no longer maintained today.
The Bluetooth Technology Alliance is responsible for overseeing the development of Bluetooth specifications, managing certification projects, and safeguarding trademark rights. A manufacturer's device must comply with the Bluetooth SIG's standards before it can be marketed as a "Bluetooth device". Bluetooth technology has a proprietary network that is distributed to devices that comply with the standard.