How to See Bluetooth Icon in Menu Bar On MacBook [Tutorial]
How to See Bluetooth Icon in Menu Bar On MacBook [Tutorial]
If for some reason a status menu that you want to appear on your menu bar isn’t there. you can populate it pretty quickly. All you have to do is open System Preferences, select one of the icons and check the box at the bottom that says “Show [blank] in menu bar.” Not every icon allows you to add it to the menu bar, granted, but this is an easy way to re-add the Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, volume or battery menu icons back to the menu bar.
Mac Users can turn or Show up Shortcut Bluetooth or Wi-Fi icon on top menu bar through system preference settings. Here I display how to disable/ Enable Bluetooth icon on the menu bar. From there we can search a new device, send a file to the selected device directly and Turn on or Turn off Bluetooth on Mac OS X directly from there like wifi. Not a complex but quite important because after a long time we will forget these Bluetooth settings and Customization.
Issues addressed in this tutorial:
Bluetooth icon MacBook pro
Bluetooth icon MacBook
Bluetooth icon MacBook Air
Bluetooth icon mac keyboard
Bluetooth icon mac missing
Bluetooth icon missing MacBook Pro
You might already be very familiar with Bluetooth without realising it: it's how the Apple Wireless Keyboard, Magic Mouse and Magic Trackpad all talk to your Mac, if you use them. The technology sends signals over radio waves, with the majority of devices able to transmit over distances up to 10m (33ft).
Ever stared at a menu bar for inspiration? Fortunately for MacBook owners like you, people in Cupertino are paid to do just that, and these designers get the big bucks to make the Mac OS X menu bar the best that it can be. Thus were born menu bar icons, which add useful controls in what would otherwise be a wasted expanse of white.
Technically, you can connect up to seven Bluetooth devices to your Mac, but Apple recommends you don't hook up more than three or four at once. Each model in the current Mac range has Bluetooth capability built-in, and most models made in the last few years do too.
To check if yours does, look for a Bluetooth icon in the menu bar, or open System Preferences and see if there's a Bluetooth option. Alternatively, open System Information from Utilities in the Applications folder. When you choose Bluetooth, if there's information about it on the right then your Mac has it.
As well as a keyboard and mouse, you can connect Bluetooth phones, headsets, speakers and printers to your Mac. In most cases it's obvious enough what a device is designed to do, but what it's actually capable of doing depends on which Bluetooth 'profiles' it supports. If you want to use a device to play music, for example, it must support the A2DP profile used for one-way transmission of audio, which is designed specifically for music.
This tutorial will apply for MacBook Pro, Air, Mini's running the macOS operating system. This tutorial was performed on a macOS Big Sur system.