Connecting Many to Many With Bluetooth Technology
Thanks to its popularity in a variety proven uses, Bluetooth technology is still evolving today. What began as a basic wireless connection standard has been adapted to embrace wireless technologies in many different pieces of hardware. Its many functions gives Bluetooth a near-ubiquity that similar technologies lack due to the scarcity and lack of appeal of those technologies.
Cell phones employ Bluetooth technology, allowing mobile users to connect to their hands free headsets without the use of wires. Cab drivers and truckers often use this technology to great effect, as legislation in most countries will prevent them from holding a phone while they drive. The lack of wires and cables is also a great benefit, as these can be a hindrance.
File sharing is also made easier with Bluetooth. As soon as one Bluetooth device is within the range of another, an electronic communication automatically establishes a link so that files can be transferred between the two media without a physical material connection. So the cell phone can once again use its Bluetooth technology to, for example, download photos it has stored on its memory to a personal computer or laptop.
Similarly, you can share MP3 files between media, so you could upload music from your computer to your phone with relative ease. The technology enables the sharing of not just files. You can store other forms of data, such as transferring the e-mail application address book of your laptop to your cellular phone's directory. Similarly, the numbers stored on your phone can be transferred to the computer. The two can be synchronized. If your laptop doesn't have Bluetooth technology, all it requires is a Bluetooth adapter and the phone and computer will be able to talk to each other once they're within range of each other.
When sending packets across a network, Bluetooth technology cannot compete with the standard Local Area Network or LAN in its current form. The capacity that the LAN cables have to send data is far greater than the wireless technology that Bluetooth utilizes. However, Bluetooth technology can be easily deployed in the establishment of a small office or home office. Two computers or more can be connected with few problems on a network through Bluetooth, and other hardware such as printers and scanner can be added as required. The technology can be used to share the data on other pieces of hardware such as phones and personal digital assistants. Ranges of up to 10 meters are effective using the technology, and signal strengths can increase to allow for hardware to communicate at distances of 100 meters.
The interest and investment in Bluetooth technology by its various advocates - some heavy hitting hardware and software corporations among them - is so great that technology is bound to improve. Bluetooth will soon be competing with LAN networks in terms of the ability to send data at ever greater speeds.






