Bluetooth Will Handle Video at Home
by Notisbolaget

The industry has now begun to discuss a new Bluetooth standard,
generation 2, enabling speeds up to 10 megabit per second: This capacity
will open up the gates for real-time video transmission. This means that
the Bluetooth technology can be used in local residential networks or in
business networks for telephony, Internet and TV.

Örjan Johansson at Ericsson Mobile Communications confirms that the
discussions have been initiated:

"The conventional telephone will manage with Bluetooth version 1
offering a speed at 720 kilobits per second for two-way communication.
But now we're talking about a more advanced product," he says.

The question about the coverage of Bluetooth generation 2 is not yet
settled. It is possible that it will exceed the 10 to 100 meter range of
the first generation. At the very least it will replace all cables in a
room. Philips and Sony are working on the video distribution in the
local networks.

Two Competing Standards
As the American IEEE 802.11 standard for wireless LANs (Local Area
Network) allows a capacity of up to 11 megabits per second, it is
obvious that there is a situation of competition. Örjan Johansson
expects the two alternatives to coexist.

"802.11 is intended for another market segment and another target group
than Bluetooth. The driving factors behind the less expensive Bluetooth
technology are the mobile telephony sector and the market for small,
less expensive, battery supplied devices," he says.

Backing the Bluetooth standard are nearly 2000 companies. This means
that the new Bluetooth version 2.0 may see a major breakthrough.
Bluetooth 2.0 opens up the gates for real-time video transmission with
the same resolution as a conventional television screen, at speeds
comparable with digital television. According to Ericsson, the receivers
will in this case be small laptops and TVs rather than mobile phones.

The specification is presumably released next year whereas the actual
products will require some additional years to reach the market.

"Until then we will market some hundred million first generation
Bluetooth products, which later on can be upgraded to Bluetooth 2.0,"
Örjan Johansson says.

Torbjörn Johansson, Technical Manager at IBM and a member of the
Bluetooth committee, wants the technology to be developed in three
areas; speed, coverage and power consumption. These three will then in
one way or another determine the price. Speed conflicts with coverage
and these two have to be adapted to each other.

New Applications for High Speed
"Increased speed makes new applications possible," he says.

The competition between Bluetooth and conventional radio based data
networks (WLAN), such as 802.11 based networks, grows as Bluetooth is
being developed and radio LAN becomes less expensive. The overlap
between the two widens but in some aspects there is still a gap: High
speed and large coverage require expensive components; Bluetooth is more
cost efficient with lower speed and smaller coverage. In the end, the
market will decide which technology will dominate a certain area.

"The fact that Bluetooth is developed is reasonable and sound.
Technology that is not developed is overtaken," Torbjörn Johansson
states.

The Swedish company, A Brand New World, develops Bluetooth based
services and applications. According to Per Larsson, Bluetooth Product
Manager at A Brand New World, the higher data speeds enabled in
Bluetooth 2.0 correspond to the company's strategies in alternative
infrastructures.

"This makes it possible to use Bluetooth as a wireless carrier for new
types of services and applications. Together with additional intelligent
antenna systems providing extended coverage, Bluetooth may become the
dominating technology for the license free frequency bands, he predicts.
If Bluetooth gets enough cost efficient, it can take over parts of the
802.11 market, but the two systems will also complement each other," Per
Larsson concludes.

 MobileStart and the author. www.MobileStart.com

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Last Updated: $Date: 2001/01/12 19:04:50 $