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Welcome To MyBlueGadgets.com Bluetooth Technology and News Blog
Tuesday, November 20, 2007
Bluetooth Headsets that provide a wireless connection to cell phones can sometimes be tricky! But there are so many advantages that you can't pass it up. So here at Mybluegadgets.com We have tried and tested three bluetooth headsets to see how well they held a conversation and how easy they were to link to a cell phone.
The $41.99 Plantronics Bluetooth Headset Explorer 320 had very clear reception which allowed us to walk up to 30 feet away from our phone before the phone call was dropped, it also was very easy to set up. Next the $38.45 Motorola Bluetooth® H350 Headset was a little harder to connect to the phone but provided clear conversations. Finally, the $39.96 Jabra BT250VR Bluetooth® Headset with Vibrating Call Alert had a good distance of 30 feet and was not to hard to set up on our phones. Although setting up your bluetooth headset does take some patience you will be pleased with the freedom and benefits that the headset provides. Your Source for: Bluetooth Technology News
Thursday, November 8, 2007
The world revolves around bluetooth headsets does anyone know why that is? Bluetooth Headsets are everywhere these days everyone knows the word Bluetooth even if they don't know exactly what it is. Headsets come in a variety of designs, colors, and styles. If you need a Bluetooth Headset then Mybluegadgets.com is the place to find it, with a wid selection of various headsets in all the designs, colors, and styles that you want and need.
Plantronics Bluetooth Headsets plus Motorola Bluetooth Headsets and don't forget the ever growing line of Jabra Bluetooth Headsets. At Mybluegadgets.com you can find Bluetooth Headsets by Brand. Get your loved one that special Bluetooth Headset for Christmas this year and make them safe and happy. Remember Bluetooth Headsets are found in bundles at Mybluegadgets.com!!! Find out more about Bluetooth Headsets every day at our blog here at Mybluegadgets.com. Your Source for: Bluetooth Technology News
Bluetooth technology has revolutionized the manner in which its users operate electronic devices such as their computer, cell phone, etc. It has made interpersonal and professional communication simpler and more comfortable. As long as you are within the required range of your wireless Bluetooth devices, sharing information is as simple as clicking a button.
What are Wireless Bluetooth Devices? The name Bluetooth finds its roots in the legend that the Danish King Harald Blatand had a weakness for blueberries, which are known to stain teeth. It is a technology that uses low range radio frequency and allows various Bluetooth devices such as computers, cell phones, printers and PDAs an easy way to access and share information. At a time as many as seven connections can be established at 1Mbps. A wireless Bluetooth device such as a Bluetooth headset makes cell phone calls comfortable and allows easy access to other Bluetooth devices. Most of the wireless Bluetooth devices available today use Bluetooth 1.1 and you would need to ensure that the Bluetooth device that you buy is compatible with your electronics. The recently introduced Bluetooth 1.2 offers more privacy and security to the user and reduces the risk of tracking and snooping. Why You Should Buy Wireless Bluetooth Devices? Wireless Bluetooth devices save the time and effort that would otherwise be necessary in accessing information from your electronic devices. Bluetooth actually allows your Bluetooth devices to talk to each other. Once they are paired you have easy access to required data and information. With the Toyota Pirus and Lexus S430 car navigation systems have also been Bluetooth enabled. The aim of wireless Bluetooth devices is to make the life of the user easier and simpler. You can pick a call on your Bluetooth headset even if your cell phone is in your bag or connect to your computer to set up a teleconference. With Bluetooth the possibilities are endless. Elton Jenkins http://www.mybluegadgets.com Article Source : Featured Articles Your Source for: Bluetooth Technology News
Sunday, October 7, 2007
Everyone get ready for Christmas. If you are a Bluetooth Fan then tis the BLUETOOTH season......
The Bluetooth Special Interest Group (SIG) has unveiled the latest Bluetooth devices to launch in time for Christmas. Highlights include a Sony Ericsson Bluetooth watch which syncs with your phone, a lightweight new headset from Nokia and the Freedom Universal Keyboard from Freedom Input. The Bluetooth Watch MBW-150 is available in three designs and boasts caller ID, SMS notification, vibration alert and a mute/reject button. The watch’s display also shows what track you are playing via your phone’s media player, as well as possessing controls to adjust the volume, or skip and rewind tracks. The Nokia Bluetooth Headset BH-702 looks sublime and only weighs 10g. The ear hook is impressively thin meaning there should be no problem wearing it with glasses. What’s more the BH-702 also offers an impressive 360 minutes of talktime. The Freedom Universal Keyboard helps transform your mobile device into a laptop with a full five row alphanumeric keyboard using full sized keys for ease of use. When you’re finished it neatly folds away into a compact unit meaning transporting it can be done with minimum fuss. All three devices will be on sale in time for Christmas, with both the MBW-150 and Nokia BH-702 out mid to late October and the Freedom Universal Keyboard out now. Your Source for: Bluetooth Technology News
Bluetooth helps find new Facebook friends
Thursday, August 16, 2007 Bath University scientists in the UK have created a tool which uses unique ID of Bluetooth devices, like cellphones, to build new friendship networks in the hugely popular social network Facebook. Users register with the Facebook tool, called Cityware, to track encounters in the real world via Bluetooth. "Networks are everywhere - social and digital. The really nice thing about Bluetooth is that when you are walking down the street, although you are not talking to anyone, your Bluetooth device can be talking to other devices. "People with Bluetooth devices are actually creating an ad-hoc communications infrastructure where information can flow through the city over time." says Dr Vassilis Kostakos, research associate at the University of Bath. The way Cityware works is, the tool lets users find out if any of the Bluetooth device users they bump into regularly are Cityware users, and have profiles on Facebook. If so, they can then choose to add that person to their friends' list. The tool works in four parts: Facebook account, Cityware application, Bluetooth device and Cityware node. Cityware users must have a Facebook account, install the Cityware application, and register the Bluetooth ID of their mobile phone or laptop with the software. The researchers have set up a series of nodes around the United Kingdom and at locations in the United States. These nodes are computers which constantly scan for Bluetooth-enabled devices in a given area, and send that information back to servers which compare the IDs of the Bluetooth devices with any enabled Facebook profiles. Nodes have been set up in Bath, University College London, the University of California in San Diego, with more nodes to soon go online in Sweden, Hong Kong and Sydney. "We are interested in understanding how cities work, how people move around. More recently we have been looking at how viruses spread in cities - biological and digital viruses." The ambition for the Facebook tool is to have mobile phones alert each other when in the proximity of another Facebook user who shares common interests or common friends. Your Source for: Bluetooth Technology News
Bluetooth combines GPS with products and Savvi.
By Ismini Scouras Courtesy of eeProductCenter (10/01/2007 10:54 AM EDT) San Diego, Calif.—Ethertronics has developed a ceramic antenna product line called Savvi, which includes a Bluetooth-only version and one that combines GPS and Bluetooth capabilities. Savvi products are designed to power a variety of multi-RF technology electronic devices. Ethertronics' Savvi miniature antennas employ its patented Isolated Magnetic Dipole (IMD) technology, whose high isolation characteristics make them immune to frequency shifts. The first Savvi product is a dual-band, dual-feed GPS and Bluetooth antenna for portable devices. A second Savvi antenna for Bluetooth-only reception in a 1.3-mm low-profile package is also available. The antenna's compact size allows for designers to embed it into small portable devices, while dual-feed capabilities simplify RF design and integration. The dual-band ceramic antennas operate independently at the 1.575-GHz and 2.4-GHz frequency bands. Source Your Source for: Bluetooth Technology News
Sunday, July 29, 2007
A new version of the wireless technology will soon allow consumers to beam photos from cameras and use their cell phone to make purchases, reports Business 2.0 Magazine.
By Michal Lev-Ram, Business 2.0 Magazine writer-reporter (Business 2.0 Magazine) -- There are a billion Bluetooth-enabled devices in the world -- cell phones, headsets, cameras, keyboards, printers. Another 13 million of them are being sold every week. But that's chump change compared with the growth that analysts expect to see once a new version of the short-range wireless technology makes its way into products later this year. Here's why: Pairing up Bluetooth devices is a laborious process that requires as many as 15 steps. "The most significant challenge that Bluetooth has faced is making the technology more usable, especially when it comes to setting up connections," says Stuart Carlaw, an analyst with New York-based ABI Research. "There is no doubt that there are more viable business models for the technology. They just need to be better supported at the most difficult point" in the user's experience. That should happen this fall, when the first Bluetooth upgrade in three years, Bluetooth 2.1, starts shipping. Devices will be paired in as few as three clicks. Encrypted data transfer means no need for passwords. And lower power consumption means that Bluetooth 2.1 devices will have as much as five times the battery life of their predecessors. 6 new Bluetooth sounds All of which means that mass-market Bluetooth use is expected to expand far beyond the cyborg-style phone headset. Users will be able to easily beam photos from cameras to printers or digital picture frames. Wireless keyboards, mice, and videogame controllers will get a boost too. Bluetooth 2.1 will be integrated with near field communication, or NFC, a standard for mobile payments, so consumers will have more opportunities to pay with their phones. Companies like Jabra, Motorola (Charts, Fortune 500), and Plantronics (Charts) are developing Bluetooth 2.1 gadgets that should be out in time for the holiday season. The Bluetooth Special Interest Group -- a consortium backed by Intel (Charts, Fortune 500), Microsoft (Charts, Fortune 500), and Nokia (Charts) -- says the number of Bluetooth devices in the world should double to 2 billion by 2010. "Clearly, one of the goals of the new specification is to drive use of the technology and help our members sell more products," says Kevin Keating, senior marketing manager at the Bluetooth SIG. The best of ultramobile PCs Sales of Bluetooth headsets alone, now at $8 billion, are expected to hit $14 billion within three years -- aided by an increasing number of bans on driving while talking on handsets. Such bans will go into effect in states like California and Washington by next year, creating millions of potential new headset customers. "So far, the pairing aspect has been a barrier to entry compared with headsets that you plug into the phone," says Peter Hartmann, global product manager at headset maker Jabra. "Now it will be much easier for first-time users." In 2008, Bluetooth 2.1 will itself be replaced by Bluetooth 3.0, code-named Seattle. That version is expected to integrate ultra-wideband technology, meaning Bluetooth that can handle the transfer of much larger amounts of data: Seattle should be a whopping 228 times faster than its predecessor. Bluetooth's supporters expect that upgrade to have a major impact in the entertainment and consumer electronics industries, since it will enable users to transfer video between TVs and cell phones. Even Hollywood is going blue. Your Source for: Bluetooth Technology News
From the Bluetooth Wizard:
Bluetooth is a life saver!!! Check out the bluetooth news about in Fox News about a bluetooth device that sends a message to the hospital if someone is having a heart attack. Thursday, July 19, 2007 By Maureen Scarpelli Why use a phone when your heart can contact emergency response on its own? Researchers in India say when a heart attack strikes, your heart should soon be able to send a text message to the hospital to get help. A study published Tuesday in Inderscience's International Journal of Electronic Healthcare found a wearable "Telemedicine" Bluetooth heart device is able to send text messages to local hospitals when the heart shows signs of extreme distress. The Bluetooth heart monitor regularly records a patient's electrocardiogram (EKG), and sends levels to the patient's cell phone, but also checks the signals for signs of sudden cardiac failure, and if a problem is detected, alerts the nearest medical center with a text message. Thulasi Bai, a professor at the Sathyabama University in Tamil Nadu, India, told FOXNews.com the Bluetooth monitor gives patients at risk for heart failure a chance for more mobile lifestyles. "Before, the doctor has to determine the information, but with this, everything is truly automatic and immediate care can be given to the patient," said Bai, who began testing the model two months ago along with her senior professor S.K. Srivatsa. The difference between this wearable heart monitor and other previously developed ones is that this device not only transmits information to the doctor through Bluetooth, a wireless network used to transfer information, but it is also designed to read the EKG levels carefully enough to know if the heart is actually suffering an attack before sending the message, Bai said. Not only would this offer the patient more mobility, said Bai, but it would save the doctor time in analyzing the levels him or herself. The scarcity of doctors available in densely-populated India is what inspired her project, she said. Read More at Source Your Source for: Bluetooth Technology News |
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