How Bluetooth Works
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There are
lots of different ways that electronic devices can connect to one another. For
example:
When you
use computers, entertainment systems or telephones, the various pieces and
parts of the systems make up a community of electronic devices. These devices
communicate with each other using a variety of wires, cables, radio signals
and infrared light beams, and an even greater variety of connectors, plugs
and protocols. The art of
connecting things is becoming more and more complex every day. We sometimes
feel as if we need a Ph.D. in electrical engineering just to set up the
electronics in our homes! In this edition of HowStuffWorks,
we will look at a completely different way to form the connections, called Bluetooth.
Bluetooth is wireless and automatic, and has a number of interesting features
that can simplify our daily lives. The
Problems
Companies
that manufacture computers, entertainment systems and other electronic
devices have realized that the incredible array of cables and connectors
involved in their products makes it difficult for even expert technicians to
correctly set up a complete system on the first try. Setting up computers and
home
entertainment systems becomes terrifically complicated when the person
buying the equipment has to learn and remember all the details to connect all
the parts. In order to make home electronics more user friendly, we need a
better way for all the electronic parts of our modern life to talk to each
other. That's where Bluetooth comes in. Bluetooth
Basics
The companies belonging to the Bluetooth Special Interest Group,
and there are more than 1,000 of them, want to let Bluetooth's radio
communications take the place of wires for connecting peripherals, telephones
and computers. There are
already a couple of ways to get around using wires. One is to carry
information between components via beams of light in the
infrared spectrum. Infrared refers to light waves of a lower frequency
than human eyes
can receive and interpret. Infrared is used in most television remote control
systems, and with a standard called IrDA
(Infrared Data Association) it's used to connect some computers with
peripheral devices. For most of these computer and entertainment purposes,
infrared is used in a digital mode -- the signal is pulsed on and off very
quickly to send data from one point to another. Infrared
communications are fairly reliable and don't cost very much to build into a
device, but there are a couple of drawbacks. First, infrared is a "line
of sight" technology. For example, you have to point the remote control
at the television or DVD
player to make things happen. The second drawback is that infrared is
almost always a "one to one" technology. You can send data between
your desktop computer and your laptop computer,
but not your laptop computer and your PDA at the same time. These two
qualities of infrared are actually advantageous in some regards. Because
infrared transmitters and receivers have to be lined up with each other,
interference between devices is uncommon. The one-to-one nature of infrared communications
is useful in that you can make sure a message goes only to the intended
recipient, even in a room full of infrared receivers. The second
alternative to wires, cable synchronizing, is a little more
troublesome than infrared. If you have a Palm Pilot, a Windows CE device or a
Pocket PC, you know about synchronizing data. In synchronizing, you attach
the PDA to your computer (usually with a cable), press a button and make sure
that the data on the PDA and the data on the computer match. It's a technique
that makes the PDA a valuable tool for many people, but synchronizing the PDA
with the computer and making sure you have the correct cable or cradle to
connect the two can be a real hassle. Bluetooth is intended to get
around the problems that come with both infrared and cable synchronizing
systems. The hardware vendors, which include Siemens, Intel, Toshiba,
Motorola and Ericsson, have developed a specification for a very small radio
module to be built into computer, telephone and entertainment equipment. From
the user's point of view, there are three important features to Bluetooth:
Bluetooth
communicates on a frequency of 2.45 gigahertz, which has been set
aside by international agreement for the use of industrial, scientific and
medical devices (ISM). A number of devices that you may already use take
advantage of this same radio-frequency band. Baby monitors, garage-door
openers and the newest generation of cordless phones all make use of
frequencies in the ISM band. Making sure that Bluetooth and these other
devices don't interfere with one another has been a crucial part of the
design process.
Avoiding
Interference With many
different Bluetooth devices in a room, you might think they'd interfere with
one another, but it's unlikely that several devices will be on the same
frequency at the same time, because Bluetooth uses a technique called spread-spectrum
frequency hopping. In this technique, a device will use 79 individual,
randomly chosen frequencies within a designated range, changing from one to
another on a regular basis. In the case of Bluetooth, the transmitters change
frequencies 1,600 times every second, meaning that more devices can make full
use of a limited slice of the radio spectrum.
Since every Bluetooth transmitter uses spread-spectrum transmitting automatically,
it’s unlikely that two transmitters will be on the same frequency at the same
time. This same technique minimizes the risk that portable phones or baby
monitors will disrupt Bluetooth devices, since any interference on a
particular frequency will last only a tiny fraction of a second. When
Bluetooth-capable devices come within range of one another, an electronic
conversation takes place to determine whether they have data to share or
whether one needs to control the other. The user doesn't have to press a
button or give a command -- the electronic conversation happens
automatically. Once the conversation has occurred, the devices -- whether
they're part of a computer system or a stereo -- form a network. Bluetooth
systems create a personal-area network (PAN), or piconet, that may
fill a room or may encompass no more distance than that between the cell
phone on a belt-clip and the headset on your head. Once a piconet is
established, the members randomly hop frequencies in unison so they stay in
touch with one another and avoid other piconets that may be operating in the
same room. An
Example The
cordless telephone has one Bluetooth transmitter in the base and another in the
handset. The manufacturer has programmed each unit with an address
that falls into a range of addresses it has established for a particular type
of device. When the base is first turned on, it sends radio signals
asking for a response from any units with an address in a particular range. Since
the handset has an address in the range, it responds, and a tiny network
is formed. Now, even if one of these devices should receive a signal from another
system, it will ignore it since it’s not from within the network. The
computer and entertainment system go through similar routines, establishing
networks among addresses in ranges established by manufacturers. Once the
networks are established, the systems begin talking among themselves. Each
piconet hops randomly through the available frequencies, so all of the
piconets are completely separated from one another. Now the
living room has three separate networks established, each one made up of devices
that know the address of transmitters it should listen to and the address of
receivers it should talk to. Since each network is changing the frequency of
its operation thousands of times a second, it’s unlikely that any two
networks will be on the same frequency at the same time. If it turns out that
they are, then the resulting confusion will only cover a tiny fraction of a
second, and software designed to correct for such errors weeds out the
confusing information and gets on with the network’s business. Most of the
time, a network or communications method either works in one direction at a
time, called half-duplex communication, or in both directions
simultaneously, called full-duplex communication. A speakerphone that
lets you either listen or talk, but not both, is an example of half-duplex
communication, while a regular telephone handset is a full-duplex device. Because
Bluetooth is designed to work in a number of different circumstances, it can
be either half-duplex or full-duplex. The cordless
telephone is an example of a use that will call for a full-duplex
(two-way) link, and Bluetooth can send data at more than 64,000 bits per
second in a full-duplex link -- a rate high enough to support several human
voice conversations. If a particular use calls for a half-duplex link --
connecting to a computer
printer, for example -- Bluetooth can transmit up to 721 kilobits per
second (Kbps) in one direction, with 57.6 Kbps in the other. If the use calls
for the same speed in both directions, a link with 432.6-Kbps capacity in
each direction can be made. Specs
For more
information on Bluetooth and related topics, check out the links on the next
page. Lots
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