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What Is Bluetooth

By admin | April 22, 2007

Bluetooth
Bluetooth is a low-power-consumption and short-range wireless technology for personal area networks (PANs). It connects your personal electronic devices, such as laptops, mobile phones, digital cameras, audio equipments, and printers, without the clutter of cables. The Swedish telecom giant Ericsson originally developed Bluetooth. The name is inspired by King Harold Bluetooth, known for his unification of previously warring tribes from Denmark, Norway, and Sweden. Likewise, the Bluetooth technology was intended to unify and connect different personal electronic devices.
In This Article:

With Bluetooth, you can place gadgets wherever you want, and finally have a clean office desk. But perhaps more importantly, Bluetooth saves time and improves mobility by supporting a portable network anywhere. You do not have to stop, sit down, and mess with the cables in order to use your electronics. This portable personal network is typically anchored in a smartphone or laptop computer. To fully understand the power of Bluetooth, let’s first check out some common use cases for the Bluetooth technology.

What Can You Do with Bluetooth?
Supported by almost all electronics and computer vendors, Bluetooth can be found everywhere.

The following is just a partial list of uses of Bluetooth today.

There are many other use cases that I cannot cover in the limited space of this article. For any specific use case, it might seem that it is not a big deal to use a cable connection instead of a Bluetooth wireless connection. But if you have multiple devices that need to communicate with each other, the number of cables increases geometrically as the number of the devices does. Bluetooth becomes more and more important as we carry more and more personal gadgets. The Bluetooth solution is especially useful for smartphones, as most smartphones use non-standard and expensive data cables.
To take advantage of Bluetooth devices and applications, we need to learn a little about technology behind Bluetooth.

Source: http://www.macdevcenter.com/pub/a/mac/2005/11/18/what-is-bluetooth.html

Topics: Computers & Software |

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