Bluetooth
Bluetooth Introduction
Bluetooth is an industrial specification for wireless personal area networks (PANs). Bluetooth provides a way to connect and exchange information between devices such as mobile phones, laptops, PCs, printers, digital cameras, and video game consoles over a secure, globally unlicensed short-range radio frequency. The Bluetooth specifications are developed and licensed by the Bluetooth Special Interest Group.
Specifications
Bluetooth
Bluetooth is implemented in a variety of new products such as phones, printers, modems, and headsets. Bluetooth is analogous to USB, and is acceptable for situations when two or more devices are in proximity to each other and don't require high bandwidth. Bluetooth is most commonly used with phones and hand-held computing devices, either using a Bluetooth headset or transferring files from phones/PDAs to computers.
Bluetooth also simplifies the discovery and setup of services. Bluetooth devices advertise all services they provide. This makes the utility of the service that much more accessible, without the need to worry about network addresses, permissions and all the other considerations that go with typical networks.
Top Articles:
New Bluetooth Technology Makes it Easier to Connect Devices
Bluetooth Special Interest Group announced details of its new specification, Version 2.1 + EDR, to advance its short range wireless technology and make it easier for consumers to connect Bluetooth devices.
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Bluetooth-enabled equipment shipments to hit 800 million
In the eighth edition of its annual Bluetooth technology report, IMS Research continues to predict strong growth with more than 500 million cellular handsets forecast to ship in 2007. Gaming equipment replaces mono headsets as the second-largest market segment this year.