Saturday, October 27, 2007

Nokia Bluetooth Technology


What is bluetooth
Bluetooth is a technology for wireless communication between devices. It's based on a low-cost short-range radio link.

Is Bluetooth Good for You?
Every decorator knows that cables and wires are unsightly and confusing. Bluetooth connections allow wireless communication between devices within a range of about 30 feet (10 meters). Unlike infrared, you don't have to point devices directly at each other, or even have both devices in the same room. Bluetooth can initiate connections automatically with paired devices, so you don't even have to think about it. And no, you don't have to pay for a Bluetooth connection, no matter how much data you transfer.

Bluetooth advantage
Nokia bluetooth advantages were in Surf and Sync, Entertainment, Audio, Car, and Imaging.

Surf and Sync with bluetooth
  • Need to check your email or a web page on your laptop? Start a GPRS connection to the Internet with your phone, then connect your phone and PC using Bluetooth. Your laptop is now online
  • Synchronize your calendar and contacts wirelessly
Entertainment with bluetooth
  • Wireless multiplayer gaming (check out the N-Gage™ game deck)
  • With a Bluetooth-enabled headset, you can listen to MP3s or FM radio on your phone without wires getting in the way - and the music stops automatically if you get an incoming call
Audio with bluetooth
  • Use a headset supporting Bluetooth and lose the wires
  • Nokia wireless headsets also allow you to handle calls from the earpiece (answer/reject and end calls, adjust volume, last number redial, and so on)
Car with bluetooth
  • Less clutter in your car
  • Get in your car and your phone and Blutooth enabled Nokia car kit automatically initiate a network using Bluetooth technology
Imaging with bluetooth
  • Send pictures to another phone or PC
  • Print images directly from your phone

Since Bluetooth chips are tiny and consume very little power, we're now seeing the widespread deployment of Bluetooth throughout mobile phones and other digital devices. The popularity of Bluetooth technology then encourages developers and manufacturers to produce new products supporting Bluetooth, so who knows what you'll be using it for in the future!

How bluetooth works
When two devices share information, there are a few things that have to be worked out: firstly, how they will physically connect - through how many wires? Or none at all? - and then, what are the agreed commands that will make sense to both devices (the protocol)? Bluetooth is an industry standard that solves both of these issues cheaply, and using very little battery power.

Bluetooth in Nokia Phone
A Nokia phone supporting Bluetooth contains a tiny, inexpensive radio chip, which is designed to send data over a specific radio frequency to another Bluetooth chip. The receiver chip, whether it's in a PC, phone, or other device, then transmits the data to the receiving device. The chips are easy to make and the entire process is very low on power consumption, so it's no surprise that Bluetooth has become a wireless industry standard.
Bluetooth communicates over radio waves on a frequency of about 2.45 gigahertz. This is the same band used by many industrial and medical devices as well as some household ones, such as garage door openers and baby monitors.

Electronic Conversations

When two devices running Bluetooth come into range of each other, a little electronic conversation happens. They decide whether or not the devices need to share data and if they do, they form a little network - usually you don't have to do anything. This is what happens when you use a Bluetooth-enabled Nokia headset or car kit.
When you send data from one phone to another, however, it's a bit different. The person on the receiving end has to accept the transfer, and there may be a password involved. These measures are for privacy and security reasons.
Voice, Data, and Audio
It's not just little packets of data that can be sent between two Bluetooth devices. Bluetooth also supports voice and audio connections (it is a radio wave, after all).

Avoiding Interference
So in one room of your house you have a stereo system that uses Bluetooth technology instead of cables, a new cordless phone model, a baby monitor, your phone, and a PC. Why don't they interfere with each other?

This is one of the neater things about the Bluetooth design. When we said it operates over a frequency of 2.45 GHz, we actually meant from about 2.40 to 2.48 gigahertz. In this range there are 79 radio frequency channels, and a Bluetooth device skips randomly between these 79 channels 1600 times per second! When two or more devices are connected, they jump around in sync. If two different "conversations" land on the same RF channel at the same time, the interference time is so short that it doesn't cause any problems.
Want more? Get all the technical info you could want at www.bluetooth.org.


Read other Nokia Technologies :
Nokia bluetooth technology
Nokia Data Synchronization technology
EDGE technology on Nokia

Nokia GPRS technology
HTML technology on Nokia Phone
Nokia Instant Messaging technology

Java™ technology on Nokia
MMS technology on Nokia Phone
Mobile Browsing technology on Nokia Phone
Mobile Email technology on Nokia Phone
Mobile Imaging technology on Nokia Phone
Mobile Music technology on Nokia Phone
Mobile Video technology on Nokia Phone
NFC technology on Nokia Phone
Presence technology on Nokia Phone
Push to Talk technology on Nokia Phone
S60 Software technology on Nokia Phone
Service Activation technology on Nokia Phone
UMA technology on Nokia Phone
Video Sharing technology on Nokia Phone
WAP technology on Nokia Phone
WCDMA technology on Nokia Phone
WLAN(Wi-Fi) technology on Nokia Phone

XHTML technology on Nokia Phone

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