Swift Pair for Bluetooth Peripherals
Published Oct 25 2018 04:54 PM 13.6K Views
Microsoft

First published on MSDN on Jan 30, 2018
Welcome everyone to Swift Pair, the newest way to pair your Bluetooth peripherals to Windows 10 PCs. This post will detail the feature and will answer any questions about how this quick and convenient feature works.

This is the next evolution of our constant quest to make Bluetooth the best it can be. No longer does a user need to navigate the Settings App and find their peripheral to pair. Windows can now do this for them by popping a notification when a new peripheral is nearby and ready to pair. The steps for a user to use and benefit from this feature are simple:

  1. Put the Bluetooth peripheral in pairing mode
  2. If the peripheral is close by, Windows will show a notification to the user
  3. Selecting “Connect” starts pairing
  4. When the peripheral is no longer in pairing mode or is no longer nearby, Windows will remove the notification from the Action Center




If at any time, a user wishes to turn Swift Pair off, they can do so in the “Bluetooth & other devices” page. Enterprises will also be able to control this feature through any existing Mobile Device Management solution.

We are working hard to bring this to as many of your favorite peripherals as possible. To try it out today, go pick up a Surface Precision Mouse, the first peripheral enabled with Swift Pair!

Our Partners


A huge thanks to the teams and partners we’ve worked with to get this feature ready. Through their help, turning this on in other peripherals should be easy. Please learn more here if you would like to build a peripheral that supports effortless pairing. 

“[Swift Pair] aims at improving initial connectivity. It represents a very important element of the overall "out-of-box" experience of our devices. We are delighted to contribute to this important technical milestone and make our devices compatible with it.”
Frederic Frappereau, Developer Relations at Logitech

“Nordic Semiconductor is glad to collaborate in the development of [Swift Pair]. Our nRF5x SoCs are ideal platform for continuously supporting user experience evolution lead by Microsoft. We have developed the feature on nRF52 platform in record time. We are happy to say that the feature will be released in an upcoming Nordic Software Development Kit” 
Kjetil Holstad, Product Manager Short Range Low Power Wireless at Nordic

If any issues or bugs are found, they can be reported along with any other feedback or suggestions using the Feedback Hub . We have fixes for some issues, which haven’t quite made it to these Insider builds yet.

Frequently Asked Questions


Does this mean the similar experiences on other platforms will work on Windows? 
At this time, only certain enabled peripherals can trigger Swift Pair. We are however looking to standardize this in the long term.

I can’t get a notification to show, and I don’t have an option in the Settings page. What is going on? 
If there isn’t a settings option that reads “Connect to certain Bluetooth devices quickly”, then this means the Bluetooth radio in your Windows device does not have the needed hardware support. If so, please let us know via the Feedback Hub .

4 Comments
Copper Contributor

This is all well and good for the consumer (my mother would love this), but it is causing confusion in a corporate environment. 

Imagine you have a user working away normally, unbeknownst to them a colleague is pairing a Bluetooth device such as a mouse on the next desk. All of a sudden the unwitting user gets a strange popup about Bluetooth, calls the service desk, causes panic and confusion.

 

Please, Microsoft keep the corporate environments in mind when developing new features like this and document ways for us to disable it en mass. 

Microsoft

Hi @Drogon1,

 

I'm on the Windows Bluetooth team and I think I can help. To disable Swift pair in corporate environments, you should be able to use the existing MDM policy, Bluetooth/AllowPromptedProximalConnections.

 

This policy will disable Swift Pair and thus disable the notifications in a dense PC environment. Please let us know if you have any further questions.

 

Thanks,

Steven

 

Copper Contributor

@Steven Ilami : I would like to know how to capture swift pair logs/events on Windows device. Is there any tool to be used for this purpose ? I am working with Headset/Earbud products and enabled support for swift pair on these products. Sometimes swift pair fails on few laptops and need to debug the swift pair service running on Windows. Could you please help ?

 

Thanks,

Kaushik

Copper Contributor

is there a "swift pair" logo (on products) to guarantee it works with swift pair

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‎Oct 29 2018 12:56 PM
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