Your headset is a monaural device, and, as such, bears bluetooth profiles HSP (HeadSet Profile) and HFP (HandsFree Profile) only, which are suitable solely for handling phone calls. The iPod Touch is not a phone, though, for what it must lack those profiles. It does have A2DP (Advanced Audio Distribution Profile) and AVRCP (Audio/Video Remote Control Profile), though, which are meant for stereo music streams. In order to have a bluetooth headset paired with your iPod, you better purchase a stereo pair out there. There are lots of brands and models available.
You know, for some platforms there are some applications which are able to route all audio sources to a monaural bluetooth headset. I don't know if there are any of such softwares to be picked up from Apple's app market. You could search for it, if you want, but be warned that such arrangements use to result in pretty poor sound quality.
Please, let me know if I can help you any further.
Answers & Comments
Your headset is a monaural device, and, as such, bears bluetooth profiles HSP (HeadSet Profile) and HFP (HandsFree Profile) only, which are suitable solely for handling phone calls. The iPod Touch is not a phone, though, for what it must lack those profiles. It does have A2DP (Advanced Audio Distribution Profile) and AVRCP (Audio/Video Remote Control Profile), though, which are meant for stereo music streams. In order to have a bluetooth headset paired with your iPod, you better purchase a stereo pair out there. There are lots of brands and models available.
You know, for some platforms there are some applications which are able to route all audio sources to a monaural bluetooth headset. I don't know if there are any of such softwares to be picked up from Apple's app market. You could search for it, if you want, but be warned that such arrangements use to result in pretty poor sound quality.
Please, let me know if I can help you any further.
Regards, Carlos