Keep an eye out for Bluetooth - Cabling Installation & Maintenance

Keep an eye out for Bluetooth


Aug 1, 2000

Stan Diehl

The inexpensive wireless platform is poised to take over short-range systems.

Few standards in the history of computing have taken off like Bluetooth, a radio-frequency-based short-range wireless-connectivity technology. The Bluetooth Special Interest Group (SIG)—founded by Intel, IBM, Ericsson, Nokia, and Toshiba and serving as a resource for companies interested in Bluetooth development—has grown to more than 1,200 member companies. Four more major companies—Microsoft, 3Com, Lucent, and Motorola—have united with the original founders to form the Bluetooth Promoter Group. All these vendors are committed to advancing Bluetooth as the next ubiquitous standard for short-range wireless connectivity, and anyone interested in wireless would be foolhardy to bet against it.

Bluetooth is designed as an inexpensive wireless-networking system for all classes of portable devices. Bluetooth-enabled devices will easily and transparently form ad hoc networks, delivering quick and convenient connections to printers, Internet access points, and workgroups. It should resolve the connectivity issues that have hampered the progress of Internet-enabled cell phones and other small portable devices. Bluetooth will provide a standard wireless connection between cell phones and personal digital assistants (PDAs), between PDAs and notebook computers, between notebook computers and local area networks (LANs), and across many other devices as a replacement for cables.

Bluetooth operates in the 2.4-GHz ISM (Industrial Scientific Medicine) band. In most countries, the frequency range is 2,400 to 2,483.5 MHz, but some countries—notably France and Spain—have set limitations on the ISM band, requiring special frequency-hopping algorithms. Products working within this reduced frequency band won't work with products using the full band, forcing additional engineering challenges for companies marketing in the reduced-band countries.

Channel spacing is 1 MHz, but some countries use different lower and upper guard bands depending on regulatory limitations. Most countries, including the United States, will use a lower guard band of 2 MHz and an upper guard band of 3.5 MHz. The radio standard calls for 0-dBm output power at the antenna, spectrum spreading with 1,600 frequency hops per second among 79 frequencies, and a gross data rate of 1 Mbit/sec. A time-division duplex scheme ensures full-duplex transmission. A Bluetooth receiver must operate at a sensitivity level of -70 dBm or better.

For more information about the Bluetooth SIG and related technologies, go to www.bluetooth.com.

Stan Diehl is the technology editor of Portable Design, another PennWell publication. This contribution is part of a longer article entitled "Constructing a Bluetooth solution" that appeared as the cover story in the November 1999 issue of Portable Design.


Bluetooth, the Viking king

No, the code name for the Bluetooth technology has nothing to do with bad dental hygiene. It's named after King Harald Bluetooth, son of Gorm "the old," who lived in Denmark between 910 and 940 AD. King Bluetooth was credited with uniting Denmark and Norway, just as the Bluetooth technology seeks to unite the portable world. The good king also brought Christianity to Scandinavia. Although it's widely held that King Harald indeed had a blue tooth, the moniker is more likely the English derivative of the original Viking language. The king had dark hair and skin, unusual for the fair Viking race, and was therefore dubbed "Blåtand," which means "dark complexion."


We Recommend

Skeletons in the telecom closet: The 10 scariest things I've seen this year

The 11 biggest cabling stories of 2011

Free app calculates loss budget

Reference poster dissects 802.11n

Fiber installation courses available online

Counterfeit cable exposed

Making the switch from 62.5- to 50-micron fiber

Telecom grounding and bonding standard published by NECA and BICSI

Free poster highlights 10 fiber-safety rules


Most Popular Articles
Top Blog Posts

TIA sets objectives for 40G over twisted pair

Cancer patients miss surgery due to cable theft

Cable tech finds 500-pound bear in customer’s basement

Nearly-electrocuted copper-cable thief speaks remorsefully

House explosions, captured on video, blamed on cable theft

Modified U.S. Army drone spies on WiFi users

Turn a wiring cabinet into a liquor cabinet


Receive Free E-mail Newsletters from Cabling Installation & Maintenance

Want to hear about more articles like this one? Sign up for our free email newsletters.



Email:

First Name:

Last Name:

Promo Code (optional):

Country:

Available Newsletters:
Cabling News

Data Centers Report

Contractor Report

 


Cabling Installation & Maintenance Topic and Resource Categories:

Data CentersCabling Standards
Network CableConnectivity Technologies
Network ProtocolsIP Convergence
WirelessDesign, Installation & Testing
Current IssueArchives
Cabling BlogBuyer's Guide