So I'd been tooling around for a while trying to find a convenient way to allow my friends to play music through my main living room system. Because I use JRiver as an active crossover/processor, music has to go through JRiver somehow to come out of my big speakers at all. So I'd been looking into using a bluetooth dongle to allow phones to pair with the computer and stream to it directly, with the idea being that the output would then get picked up by the JRiver WDM driver and fed back out.
I tried four or five different Bluetooth dongles and none of them worked (or in one case they would've worked with an older version of windows, but not with Win 10). I finally found this dongle, which actually works:
http://www.amazon.com/Kensington-Bluetooth-Adapter-Laptops-K33956AM/dp/B00B2HVAT0Steps to get up and running:
1) Plug it in
2) Go to the Kensington website and download the windows drivers (they say they're for Win 7 and 8, but I can confirm that they work fine in Win 10).
3) Install the drivers and reboot.
4) For maximum convenience/automation, I recommend setting up your WDM driver setup as described in the wiki:
http://wiki.jriver.com/index.php/WDM_Driver#Problems_With_Streaming_Video_Using_Media_Center.27s_Internal_Browser_and.2For_Erasing_Playing_Now5) Pair your phone with the computer, and stream to it the same way you'd stream to any bluetooth audio device.
On my machine this pops up a little "player window," the WDM kicks on, and instant music!
Guests will have to go through step 5 to pair their phones, but that's a fairly painless way for guests to wirelessly stream music from their phones. More interestingly, it also allows for on-demand audio app casting to your PC.
This is a big step forward in terms of improving wife and friend acceptance of my PC-only audio solution, so I'm excited
Certainly more than worth the $20 I paid for the working adapter, although maybe not worth the $85 total I wound up spending on non-working adapters (but I hate to quit halfway through a project
)