What is Bluetooth technology?
Bluetooth
technology is the global wireless standard enabling, convenient, secure
connectivity for an expanding range of devices and serves. It is an essential
element for bringing everyday objects into the connected world.
Created by
Ericsson in 1994, Bluetooth wireless technology was originally conceived as a
wireless alternative to RS-232 data cables. Bluetooth technology exchanges data
over short distances using radio transmissions. Bluetooth technology operates
in the unlicensed industrial, scientific and medical (ISM) band at 2.4 to 2.485
GHz, using a spread spectrum, frequency hopping, full-duplex signal at a
nominal rate of 1600 hops/sec. The 2.4 GHz ISM band is available and unlicensed
in most countries. In 1998, the original group of Promoter companies—Ericsson,
Intel, Nokia, Toshiba and IBM—came together to form the Bluetooth Special
Interest Group (SIG) work together to preserve, educate, and further Bluetooth
technology as a means to bring devices into the connected world.
What is Bluetooth used for?
Bluetooth
wireless technology is built into billions of products, from cars and mobile
phones to medical devices and computers and even forks and toothbrushes.
Bluetooth technology allows you to share voice, data, music, photos, videos and
other information wirelessly between paired devices.
Where does the name Bluetooth come from?
The name
"Bluetooth" comes from the 10th century Danish King Harald Blåtand or
Harold Bluetooth in English. King Blåtand helped unite warring factions in
parts of what are now Norway, Sweden and Denmark. Similarly, Bluetooth
technology was created as an open standard to allow connectivity and
collaboration between disparate products and industries.
How does Bluetooth technology differ from other
radio technologies?
Mobile
phones, FM radio and television all use radio waves to send information
wirelessly. And while Bluetooth technology also uses radio waves, it transmits
them over a shorter distance.
Radios and TV
broadcasts over many miles or kilometers. Bluetooth technology sends
information within your Personal Area Network or "PAN" at distances up to 100 meters (164
feet)—depending upon device implementation. Bluetooth technology operates in
the unlicensed industrial, scientific and medical (ISM) band at 2.4 to 2.485
GHz, using a spread spectrum, frequency hopping, full-duplex signal at a
nominal rate of 1600 hops/sec.
What else can Bluetooth technology do?
Originally
intended to be a wireless replacement for cables on phones, headsets, keyboards
and mice, Bluetooth technology now goes way beyond that. Bluetooth technology
is bringing everyday devices into a digital and connected world. In the health
and fitness market, the use cases vary widely — from sensors that monitor
activity levels to medical and wellness devices that monitor healthcare, like a
glucometer, inhaler or toothbrush. The top-selling Smartphones, PCs and tablets
all support Bluetooth technology. In-vehicle systems give the ability to make
phone calls, send texts, and even make dinner reservations. The Bluetooth SIG
is also seeing developments where drivers will monitor important information
like vehicle diagnostics, traffic, even driver health — all in real time.
Bluetooth technology is creating opportunities for companies to develop
solutions that make a consumer's life better.
What are Bluetooth Smart and Bluetooth Smart Ready?
Bluetooth
Smart and Bluetooth Smart Ready are extensions of the original Bluetooth brand
introduced in 2011. The Smart and Smart Ready designations indicate
compatibility of products using the low energy feature of the Bluetooth v4.0
specification. A Bluetooth Smart Ready product connects to both classic
Bluetooth and Bluetooth Smart low energy products. By contrast, a Bluetooth
Smart product collects data and runs for months or years on a tiny battery.
Think of a Smart product as a sensor that works for a long time without
changing the battery (like a fitness heart rate monitor) and a Smart Ready
product as a collector (like a smart phone or tablet receiving the information
and displaying it in an application).
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