


If you have a passive adaptor then it will work on your phone (if the phone supports it, many newer phones will not) but not a computer. Passive adaptors have no electronics that a "normal" USB port will understand and will not work. Recent Samsung phones should come with active headsets that should be good to use with a computer. You should now be able to use your local audio and microphone seamlessly on your Remote Desktop Connection. Windows Server will surface a notification asking if youd like to enable the Windows Audio Service. The reason I mention active headsets is that there are a few rare headsets that come with phones that can put out analogue audio on the USB-C connector, those headsets may be passive and not have a DAC built in. If the sound icon on your taskbar still displays a red cross, right-click it. You can do this using the controls in your applications as well as the sound settings available when you left or right click on the volume icon in your taskbar. They are effectively a USB sound card with built in speakers and microphone.įrom there it is just a matter of switching your audio input and outputs to use the headset. If you have an active type-C headset or adaptor, one that has a built in DAC, then it should work just work.Īctive headsets should appear as both a pair of stereo headphones and a microphone to your PC.
