Linux Running Bluetooth Access Points 45
quick_dry_3 writes: "A few days ago I saw Red-M give the first demo of their Bluetooth access point, basically its an x86 Linux box with bluetooth, looks pretty cool too - the extenders look like silver soap holders, they only have to be given power if they're inside main units range. Range was claimed to be 100m from each unit, they demoed it with a PalmV + Bluetooth PC card. Pricey at just under US$3000 though ...
They reckon an 802.11 card flattened a Palm in 2.5 minutes, but Bluetooth gave only a slight dent in normal life."
Re:Open standard? (Score:2)
The Bluetooth Specification is a de facto standard containing the information required to ensure that diverse devices supporting the Bluetooth wireless technology can communicate with each other worldwide.
The Core part specifies components such as the radio, baseband, link manager, service discovery protocol, transport layer, and interoperability with different communication protocols. The Profiles part specifies the protocols and procedures required for different types of Bluetooth applications.
Download these specifications from: here [bluetooth.com]
Grab some white papers from: here [bluetooth.com]
Cheers!
Re:Open standard? (Score:2)
Re:What is the price of the bits? (Score:1)
I wouldn't panic about the high prices just yet. It's pretty common for companies to price the "engineering" copies of their devices pretty high. They're expensive to make, and are intended for early developers who need them to build commercial products. The high price helps cover the high initial costs and, perhaps more importantly, helps ration the devices out to people who are serious about building profitable products.
The more interesting number is the $8/unit for quantity > 1 million. That's not quite at the $5 target, but it's at least in the ballpark.
Re:Linux sneaking in (Score:1)
Look at OS/2 Warp as an example. Always was years beyond anything microsoft did (or has yet to do, even).
Now that OS/2 is not being sold anymore, IBM is using linux as its desktop 'solution' (remember, IBM is a solutions provider). This is a very good thing, IMHO. All the things IBM did ahead of everyone else in OS/2 will now be done ahead of everyone else in linux.
Re:Open standard? (Score:1)
Ah, here it [eetimes.com] is. As shown on this [slashdot.org] Slashdot newsbit.
Re:Open standard? (Score:2)
I belive Apple's only requirement for the use of FireWire is that it have a Driver avalible for MacOS, and that that driver and device follow the specifications (have a valid ID, vendor, etc...), and be registered (simple process).
There was a bru-ha-ha when Apple proposed a higher, per port, fee, but that never came to pass, and the change was never reported on Slashdot (*ahem*).
On a related note, this standard is no more open than USB. There are very few makers of the USB controller silicon (*cough* *Intel* *cough*), and the maker of that standard makes it's mony by controlling the patents behind the implimentation of the standard. Sure you are free to make your own implimentation, but it is going to be damm difficult, and expensive, to do so without infringing on Intel patents... the 1394 consortium is just a bit more open/honest about it.
Wireless MAN (Score:1)
interested?
SeattleWireless [seattlewireless.net]
Great (Score:1)
Re:Open standard? (Score:1)
They Reckon? (Score:1)
They reckon an 802.11 card flattened a Palm in 2.5 minutes, but Bluetooth gave only a slight dent in normal life
Now that's interesting. They reckon?? How about some facts? I'm not so sure I trust them reckoning about something that is pretty much competition.
Here [symbol.com] is a Palm that is an 802.11 device. It runs for 9 to 10 hours with a bar code scanner and a web client running. The battery is 3.7V and 1400 mAH. A normal Palm has two 1150 mAH batteries in it, so the battery is not much bigger. I'm thinking that without the bar code scanner, it would last a lot longer.
Definitely not 2.5 minutes.
Re:Open standard? (Score:1)
Re:Open standard? (Score:1)
nearby
sez dried frog on it
take
relax
Re:Great (Score:2)
Re:Wireless on Linux (Score:2)
It gets even cooler. Imagine all the places a Bluetooth'ed device could save you time. Pretty much anywhere you stand in line and give basic information. The rent-a-car counter, any university office, Radio Shack (why do you need to know my phone number to sell me batteries?). You could have all of your relevant information entered or double-checked, so that all the person behind the counter has to do is hand you your keys/batteries/whatever.
You could even use it at McDonald's to speed up the drive through...
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Re:Great (Score:3)
Bluetooth is for PANs, not LANs. It's for devices with low memory and slow displays. Rule of thumb: Bluetooth is good for devices that use AAA batteries or less (base stations excepted, of course).
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Re:Open standard? (Score:1)
Again, the fee to use the IP behind FireWire is 25 cents and can include as many ports as you want.
Re:I don't get it (Score:2)
Turbolinux files for IPO (Score:1)
Re:Open standard? (Score:2)
Why this is important! (Score:1)
They are a spin off from Madge Networks who are a very technical company and who are Microsoft centric, and yet they choose Linux - with very good reasons.
Re:Linux sneaking in (Score:2)
(sure, some try linux and decide that they don't like it, but that's the point: they're not trapped. Nor have they invested huge sums of money into the attempt (time, yes, but no more than any other solution))
Bill - aka taniwha
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Nice thought - a UPS (Score:1)
Single point of failure (Score:2)
Hopefully, due to the distributed itch-scratching of OSS, someone will figger out a way to fix a black-out in software.. Cause, as it is now, every time the power goes out, my neighbors can hear me screaming and yelling at the damn TV, and know that "The &^%$ed PLAYBOY channel went off in the middle of a great f&^%$fest cause the *(&^&^%ing power went out! Fsck!" And I don't want them to even know that I have cable...
The REAL jabber has the /. user id: 13196
Re:Nice thought - a UPS (Score:1)
What the... (Score:3)
Wait a minute. Are they actually using these cards as intended or are they just whacking a Palm Pilot with the network adapters?
Re:Wireless on Linux (Score:5)
802.11(whatever) was designed as a replacement for the ethernet wires that connect two PCs.
Bluetooth was designed to replace the parallel, serial, IrDA and other short range low power links between devices.
Note devices. One use for Bluetooth that the mobile phone makers Ericsson are touting is a cordless Bluetooh headset for your mobile phone, removing the transmitter from your brain and allowing easier movement etc. Another is Palm to phone connectivity, no more lining your Palm V's IrDA port up with that of your Nokia 7110 phone
One of the great ideas - although wether it would ever take off or not is another matter is micro lans which allow broadcast environmental information to be displayed on compatible devices. Imagine walking into an airport and instead of looking up at the TV screens you look down at your Palm organiser which shows you where your plane is boarding and that it's 5 minutes late. It knows the flight number because you told it and when you arrived at the airport you entered their Microlan and your Palm interroageted their systems.
All this would be possible with 802.11 but the hardware necessary and the power drain of a Medium ot long range protocol would make it bulky or impractacle(sp?).
What is the price of the bits? (Score:3)
Ericsson don't quote a price for their module (the one IBM used), but StoneStreetOne (http://stonestreetone.com/bluetooth/) sell something closer to a bit of kit you could actually use, and its a THOUSAND DOLLARS. Heck at least they give a price!
According to at least one article (http://inf2.pira.co.uk/top040.htm#bt) the price of the Ericsson SDK+2 boards is £9000 (Uk Pounds). CSR apparently quote $8/unit for quantities >1m, but their SDK+2 is $8000 too (http://www.cambridgesiliconradio.com/develop.htm
With prices still this high can the forecasts of 50-100 million shipped products by mid 2001 be anything but pie in the sky? (http://www.the-arc-group.com/reports/future_mobi
It looks like Bluetooth development will be out of the question for anyone but corporates for at least another year...
Re:Open standard? (Score:2)
problems. Much like serial
and parrallel, they are not in competition.
If you need high speed DV access, use firewire.
If you need low speed(relatively) access to
printers, mice, keyboards, scanners or removable media, use usb.
I don't see any point where the two over lap. So
in that case saying USB is "kicking the crap" out
of firewire is like saying "serial is kicking the
crap out of parrallel."
And btw, as others have pointed out neither
is free speech or free beer.
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RobK
Re:Open standard? (Score:2)
Re:Wireless on Linux (Score:1)
Re:Wireless on Linux (Score:1)
website displays wrong in netscape... (Score:1)
odd for a "linux company," no?
Re:BlueTooth is a Hoax, Is not! ;-) (Score:1)
Re:What is the price of the bits? (Score:1)
Re:$3k for a football field? (Score:1)
While $3k does seem expensive, it really isn't for the convenience. Think of a setup such as this at an airport. 100 meters would cover a lot of people, and the cost of wiring would most likely be greater than the $3k. I think that the amount of simultaneous users would be a bigger limiting factor than converage area.
Now for a office or home environment where people are mostly stationary, it is most likely more economical to stick with wired networks. But the $3k price is only the starting point, and the prices will only go down from here.
Oh, just piss off you stumpfucker! (Score:1)
Schindler's List was a MOVIE, remember!
You'd fucking believe anything!
Re:Great (Score:1)
What I can't figure out is how Bluetooth is supposed to do its magic. There are some pretty restrictive limitations to the technology:
$3k for a football field? (Score:1)
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Wireless on Linux (Score:1)
Open standard? (Score:3)
Is Bluetooth a free and open standard or is it closed or licensed?
I'm wondering if we're looking at a free-like-USB or a for-pay-like-Firewire situation here. Considering Firewire's technical merits but tiny market share, the above consideration seems to be a pretty good indicator of its relevance.
I don't get it (Score:3)
I'm not about to broadcast my business over the airwaves, even if it does have Linux "support".
Re:Open standard? (Score:1)
Linux sneaking in (Score:3)
Here's how to do this with 802.11 (Score:5)
For more details, see http://www.live.com/wireless
Re:I don't get it (Score:2)
For instance, do your wireless over a technology that uses 128bit encryption (like the mad science labs' upgrade to airport) and then ssh over that already encrypted connection.
No line or connection is one hundred percent secure from attack, even if it's only vulnerable to social real-world hacking.
A host is a host from coast to coast, but no one uses a host that's close