You will have pair your BT devices again. Your bluetooth profile then the system will figure everything out itself. The solution, in short, is to remove all paired devices from My understanding is the the "bluetooth peripheral device" is your buetooth-enable mobile phone, or BT headphones, or whatever bluetooth device you have paired. The operating system simply got confused by the fact that you have some bluetooth pairings saved in yourīluetooth configuration. There fix for this problem, thankfully, is very simple: you aren't missing any drivers! That is why you can't find/install the correct driver. "why" correct, I'm convinced I got the "how" correct: Think I know exactly what is happening (I don't have another hour or two, to investigate and make sure that what I say here is correct, so anybody please feel free to investigate more and correct any misstatements I make) regardless of my whether I got the I spent several hours trying to fix this issue and read many posts, and none had a simple and clear answer (although one of them did provide me the clue that I needed to fix this problem).
![bluetooth peripheral device bluetooth peripheral device](https://www.auslogics.com/en/articles/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/fix-bluetooth-peripheral-device-driver-not-found-error.jpg)
I've had the same problem posted above for a few days. Any help getting these to work would be doubly great for me!
BLUETOOTH PERIPHERAL DEVICE DRIVERS
Some bloggers say the Widcomm drivers do not support the old CSR chips, perhaps because they are being sold in huge numbers without license fees back to Widcomm. Currently, the configuration does not work with the modem on the phone.
![bluetooth peripheral device bluetooth peripheral device](https://i.pinimg.com/originals/44/1e/00/441e00517def27ec3ab597b7a115ebcb.png)
I think there should be a Bluetooth FTP device to my cell phone, at least, in addition to the modem and PAN, and perhaps stubs for the other Bluetooth capabilities. The parent USB device is CSR Bluetooth Radio, from Cambridge Silicon Radio (bought by Widcomm), and it has children: 1) Bluetooth Device (Personal Area Network) #8 2) Bluetooth Device (RFCOMM Protocol TDI) #8 a) Standard Modem over Bluetooth link #7 (my cell phone in range) 3) Microsoft Bluetooth Enumerator a) Bluetooth Peripheral Device (!), no driver selected, Hardware ID BTHENUM\_LOCALMFG&000a BTW, I recall on the XP manual setup that the presence of Microsoft Bluetooth Enumerator was a sign that it was not configured right. Unfortunately, the new one is just like the old one, just a higher version in a smaller package.
BLUETOOTH PERIPHERAL DEVICE INSTALL
I bought the new one because drivers were so often a problem to find and to configure, although the old one did work on XP once you found the elaborate manual install procedures. I have two Vista 32 bit x86 PCs, and two bluetooth dongles, one old and one brand new. I find these problems are easier to understand if you choose device manager view devices by connection.