Title: Wireless
1Sara Saad Al-Qahtani 427201054 Ebtissam
Al-Motairy 427202249 Section 2518 Time
(8-9) English 104
2Wireless
3Wireless What is Wireless?
- The purpose of this guide is to identify the
concepts of wireless technology and how to use it
effectively. - The word wireless is one of those industry
buzzwords that has many different meanings, and
each is different depending on the circumstances.
- In general, you can safely divide the world of
wireless into two types of technology.
4Wireless What is Wireless?
- Types of wireless technologies
- Cellular
- Cellular wireless technology encompasses all that
has to do with long-range wireless communication
cellular phones, pagers, and Short Message
Service (SMS) devices, for example. - Wifi
- Wi-fi (short for Wireless Fidelity) technology is
all that has to do with transferring data between
devices over a short range, and encompasses uses
like wireless local networks, Bluetooth
networking for PDAs, and wireless keyboards, for
instance.
5Wireless What is Wireless?
- Understanding Cellular
- Understanding Wi-fi
6What is Wireless? Understanding Cellular
Cellular Network
- The biggest difference between cellular and wi-fi
wireless technology is the range and the
frequency. Cellular devices broadcast their
signals on lower frequencies than wi-fi cellular
signals are usually measured in Megahertz (Mhz). - For example, in the US, most cellular phones
operate in the 800 or 1900 Mhz frequency bands. - Cellular was designed from the beginning to offer
service over a large area, like an entire city.
Cellular wireless is called cellular because a
complete access area is made up of a network of
cells. Each transmitter sends and receives
signals only within a certain range, known as a
cell. As the phone moves between cell ranges, the
phone seamlessly switches the signal from one
cell's channel to the other.
7What is Wireless? Understanding Cellular
- The generation gap
- Cellular phones are nothing new, of course. Over
the last thirty years, the technology has gone
through enough changes to identify three distinct
"generations". Currently, cellular devices are
starting to make use of third generation (3G)
technology.
8What is Wireless? Understanding Cellular
- Analog
- Analog means that the signal is sent and received
is continuous. It is not broken down into tiny
chunks (called samples) like a digital signal. - The standard for analog cellular telephone
service in the US since 1983 has been AMPS
(Advanced Mobile Phone Service) for many years
now. This is now known as the first generation
technology. Analog cellular service is still in
use (in fact, 80 of the US still has analog
coverage, including rural areas where digital
service is not yet available), but it is losing
ground to digital cellular services for several
reasons - Analog cellular signals handle fewer calls at
once than their digital counterparts - Digital cellular can enhance the quality of the
signal, eliminating some types of noise in areas
where the signal is weaker. - Digital cellular enables more services than just
voice-e-mail, text messaging, and more can be
sent over a digital signal. - Analog signals are less secure than digital
signals, and it is easier to eavesdrop on analog
calls.
9What is Wireless? Understanding Cellular
Digital Signal
Analog signals have a continous form. Digital
representations of an analog signal are values
sampled at discreet intervals.
10What is Wireless? Understanding Cellular
- Digital
- Digital cellular service uses the same
frequencies as analog cellular, but the signal is
broken into tiny chunks (sampled), broadcast as
binary numbers, and then re-assembled when
received by the cellular device. The fact that
the signal is transmitted in a binary format
means that additional information can be added to
the signal, permitting better use of bandwidth
(i.e., more calls per frequency), better
security, and enhanced services (like call
display, for example). - CDMA
- Code Division Multiple Access is the predominant
digital cellular technology in North America.
Code division means that each call is assigned a
unique code, and is then transmitted across
multiple frequencies, depending on what is
available. Because each digital call has a unique
code, many calls can occupy the same frequencies
at the same time, and still be routed accurately
when received by the cell sites.
- Bandwidth is the amount of data that
- can be transferred at once over a network.
- It is usually measured in megabits-per-second
(Mbps).
11What is Wireless? Understanding Cellular
- GSM
- The Global Standard for Mobile communications
(GSM) is the predominant digital cellular
technology in Europe and Asia. GSM originally
used a combination of two digital formats TDMA
and FDMA. Frequency Division Multiple Access
divides the call up into chunks by frequency,
while Time Division Multiple Access splits each
call up into chunks and assigns each a time slot
within a given frequency. GSM technology splits
the calls into their own time slots, but also
spreads the chunks across a number of
frequencies. - Currently, as GSM moves towards third generation
technology, it is more like a combination of TDMA
with CDMA.
12What is Wireless? Understanding Cellular
- 3G (Third generation)
- 3G is an ITU (International Telecommunications
Union) standard for the next generation of
cellular technology. Designed as a standard over
and above the second generation technology, 3G
can work with GSM and CDMA signals. Essentially,
3G offers a much higher bandwidth than the
previous technologies, making it possible to do
things like browsing Web pages directly from the
Internet (images and all) on a cellular phone, or
sending images and even small movies over
cellular networks, from one phone to another.
13What is Wireless? Understanding Wi-fi
- Wi-fi wireless devices operate at a much higher
wireless frequency than cellular. The exact
frequency depends on what type of wi-fi
technology is being used. Wi-fi wireless is also
intended to be used within a much shorter range
usually, anywhere from 100 to 500 feet. This is
mainly due to battery life constraints (most
wi-fi devices are portable computers or handheld
devices like PDAs).
14What is Wireless? Understanding Wi-fi
IEEE - Institute of Electrical and Electronics
Engineers. IEEE is an organization of engineers,
scientists, and researchers who develop standards
for the computers and electronics industry
15What is Wireless? Understanding Wi-fi
- The technologies that most people mean when they
refer to wi-fi are one of the IEEE 802.11
wireless specifications. Designed mainly for
wireless local networks, these specifications
cover technology for making a connection between
a wireless client and a base station, or two
wireless devices
16What is Wireless? Understanding Wi-fi
- Versions of 802.11
- 802.11b
- 802.11b is the technology that originally earned
the moniker wi-fi. It was designed to extend the
original 802.11 technology specification to
handle the higher bandwidths (11 Mbps) that
cable-based local area networks do. It does this
by using the 2.4 Ghz spectrum, which is the same
unregulated spectrum used by other devices like
cordless phones and microwave ovens. The lower
frequency gives the technology a better range,
but the bandwidth is limited.
17What is Wireless? Understanding Wi-fi
- 2. 802.11aIEEE
- 802.11a is similar to 802.11b, except that it
operates in the 5 Ghz spectrum. This frequency is
more clear of interference, which allows the
802.11a standard a higher bandwidth of around 54
Mbps. However, the higher frequency means it
takes more power to transmit the signal,
resulting in a shorter range - about half that of
802.11b.
18What is Wireless? Understanding Wi-fi
- 3. Bluetooth
- Bluetooth was originally developed as a wireless
alternative to cables, but since then, many more
uses have been found. Designed specifically with
handheld devices in mind, Bluetooth operates in
the 2.4 Ghz spectrum, has very good power
consumption, and a range of about 150 feet. - Bluetooth's biggest advantage is that many
devices can network with each other at once. One
Bluetooth device establishes what is called a
piconet, which can include up to eight devices at
once. Any device in the piconet
19What is Wireless? Understanding Wi-fi
- can communicate with any other connected device.
So, for instance, the same message could be sent
from a Bluetooth-equipped computer to up to seven
PDAs within the broadcasting range.
Cellular and wi-fi are two different
technologies, broadcasting on different
frequencies with different hardware, but the
difference gap in what can be done with these
different wireless technologies is beginning to
narrow.
20Wireless Cellular Phones
- So what can you do with wireless technology?
That's the big question. Cellular phones were the
original indispensable wireless accessory, and
today's phones become more and more versatile
every day. - Telephony
- Internet access via cellular phones
- Other wireless phone applications
- WAP
- Cellular Phones in Laptops and PDAs
- Messaging Lingo
21Cellular Phones Telephony
- Believe it or not, cellular phones are still
capable of the same purpose for which they were
originally designed making phone calls. Of
course, the digital technology allows cellular
phones the capacity to use many of the digital
services that used to be the sole property of
land-based lines caller ID, three-way
conferencing, voice mail, and call waiting, to
name a few.
22Cellular Phones Internet access via cellular
phones
- More recent, but still a useful service for the
past few years has been Internet access via
cellular phones. Access to the Internet via
cellular networks has progressed through a few
stages over the years.
23Cellular Phones Internet access via cellular
phones
- Text e-mail
- Many cellular services offered the ability to
send and receive e-mail messages to an e-mail
address hosted by the provider. This was useful,
but the first cellular phones offering this
service had to rely on the phone's keypads for
inputting text (difficult with 26 letters and
only 10 keys), and the displays offered no more
than one to two lines of text. As well, this
divided a user's communication, in a time when
most 'Net-connected people already had at least
one or more e-mail addresses.
24Cellular Phones Internet access via cellular
phones
- Text Web-browsing
- The introduction of the WAP protocol (see below)
in the mid 1990s made it possible for cellular
phones to actually request content from the World
Wide Web and receive it across the cellular
network. The problem with this soon became
apparent since it was hard to compress so much
text into the tiny LCD screens available at the
time, and the lack of images made it difficult to
view certain sites. - 3G
- Full media Web browsing is now available thanks
to the faster bandwidth of 3G cellular
technology. Color LCD screens can display images
and even animation, and the networks are fast
enough to download files in acceptable amounts of
time.
25Cellular Phones Other wireless phone applications
- Games
- Games on cellular phones are probably the next
big market for cellular technology. Games were
introduced on mobile phones over the course of
several waves - Embedded games
- First came small games that came embedded into
the cellular phones. These were simple video
games that users could only play on their phone
alone, and had no connection with the outside
world. Essentially, these were bonus features to
sell the "new" phones with LCD screens (instead
of a simple numeric LCD).
26Cellular Phones Other wireless phone applications
- SMS-based games
- Although not as popular in the United States as
they are in Europe and Asia, text games based on
SMS messaging introduced the first interactive
elements to wireless phone gaming. Most of these
types of games were versions of quiz game shows,
or the long-cherished text-based role-playing
adventures. - Java gaming
- The door for cellular phone gaming was opened
wide with the introduction of a version of the
Java programming language designed specifically
for mobile phones. In addition to taking
advantage of Java's capacity to combine text,
graphics, and sound, the biggest advantage it
brings to mobile phones is the ability to
download Java applications across the cellular
network. This gives users the potential for
accessing a huge library of games, or downloading
larger games in modules.
27Cellular Phones Other wireless phone applications
- Interactivity
- Using SMS messaging, many cellular services now
offer community aspects to games, such as a
central server that stores all users' high scores
for a video game. With Bluetooth chips or
infrared transmitters, certain brands of cellular
phones can let two or more users play
head-to-head or cooperative video games. - With the faster data transmission available
thanks to the new 3G technology, cellular gaming
is poised to become an even larger phenomenon. In
theory, users will be able to play cooperatively
or head-to-head on games simultaneously across
the cellular network, even if they are physically
located miles apart.
28Cellular Phones Other wireless phone applications
- Text Messaging
- SMS, Simple Message Service , has become an
integral part of lifestyle for many people,
especially youth in Europe and Asia. Similar to
the concept of e-mail, users with SMS-capable
phones can send text messages across the network
to other users. An SMS message can be received
immediately (if the recipient has his or her
device on), or held like e-mail until the
recipient connects to get it.
29Cellular Phones Other wireless phone applications
- SMS messages are limited to 160 characters. This
has prompted a whole vocabulary for SMS messaging
to evolve, based on the trick of using
abbreviations and stylized alphanumeric "words"
to cram as much information as possible into the
160 characters. - With the faster transmission speeds of the
current "2.5G" technology, and the enormous speed
promised by 3G technology, many models of
cellular phones are now being created that allow
transferring of more than just text messages.
Multimedia Message Service (MMS) allows more
complex multimedia files (like video) to be sent
along with a message. MMS allows cellular phones
equipped with digital camera technology to take
photos or even short movie clips, and transmit
them via MMS to other phones equipped with the
necessary technology to receive and display MMS
messages.
30Cellular Phones WAP
- WAP stands for Wireless Application Protocol , a
specification for transmitting data and
information at high speeds along digital wireless
technologies like CDMA and GSM. The most popular
original use for WAP technology was to enable
cellular phones to browse the Web over the
cellular network. These "micro-browsers" combined
WAP for data transfer with HTML to display Web
content (text only) on the cellular phone's tiny
LCD display.
31Cellular Phones WAP
- What can you do now with WAP?
- WAP's largest use is still for Internet and
information services. Text Web browsing, e-mail
access, and up-to-the-minute stock symbol tickers
are some of the WAP services that cellular
carriers currently offer. - What is on the horizon?
- WAP has recently introduced its second
incarnation. WAP 2.0 uses a form of XML called
WML (Wireless Markup Language) for markup display
on cellular phones. The biggest advantage to WML
is that content written using the language can be
easily scaled to fit any device from tiny two
line, text-only displays all the way to the
larger graphic screens found in 3G cellular
phones. WML microbrowsers will be able to display
color graphics, and is optimized for one-handed
navigation.
32Cellular Phones Cellular Phones in Laptops and
PDAs
- Not all cellular phones are the type that clips
onto your belt. Many laptops can be purchased
that have cellular phones built right in. These
phones are built to connect to a certain type of
service (CDMA or GSM, for example), and are
mainly used as a modem for the computer to dial
in to Internet Service Providers, or into modems
connected to corporate networks. - A good number of PDAs also have cellular phones
built into the hardware. The phones in PDAs are
used to connect to specific cellular networks for
WAP applications like e-mail and Web browsing.
However, there are also PDAs that include an
earpiece and a microphone, and have the
capability of operating as a "real" cellular
phone, with the operating system taking care of
details like the dialing of numbers or digital
call services like caller ID.
33Cellular Phones Messaging Lingo
- f U can rED DIS, U R alredi SMS l33t!
- Did you understand that message? If so, you can
probably just skip this part right now, since you
won't be seeing anything you don't already know. - The text above was an example of some possible
abbreviations that can be used to shorten a
message in order to make the most of the 160
character SMS limit. This type of text messaging
lingo (also known as "txt") is becoming so
popular, that some people are claiming that they
find it easier to write using the shorthand
lingo. A 13-year old girl in Scotland made
newspapers worldwide for turning in an essay on
her summer holidays that was written entirely in
txt. Upon confronting the girl about it, her
teacher was astonished to hear that the girl
found regular English too difficult, and chose to
use txt because she could express herself better
with it.
34Cellular Phones Messaging Lingo
- A snippet from the essay
- "My smmr hols wr CWOT. B4, we used 2go2 NY 2C my
bro, his GF thr 3 - kids FTF. ILNY, it's a gr8
plc." - (Translation) "My summer holidays were a complete
waste of time. Before, we used to go to New York
to see my brother, his girlfriend and their three
screaming kids face to face. I love New York.
It's a great place." - Transl8it.com
- Transl8it is a Web site that contains, among
other things, an online translator for
translating English to txt, and back again. It
includes a character meter, so you can see how
many characters you save by using the txt version
of a message.
35Wireless Wireless for Desktop/Laptop Computers
- WLAN
- Wireless networks security
36Wireless for Desktop/Laptop Computers WLAN
- WLAN (Wireless Local Area Network) is another
buzzword that sounds very specific, but really is
a general term to refer to any type of local-area
networking that uses high-frequency radio waves
instead of cables to transmit data. The following
are some examples of WLAN technologies
37Wireless for Desktop/Laptop Computers WLAN
- IEEE 802.11b
- 802.11b, aka Wi-Fi, is probably the most popular
form of wireless LAN technology. Using a Wi-Fi
LAN has many advantages - No need to lay down Ethernet cables. In some
locations, it can be extremely difficult to
create a permanent set up for the hardware cables
necessary to support a LAN. A Wi-Fi network means
that all a computer needs is to be in range, and
it can access the network.
38Wireless for Desktop/Laptop Computers WLAN
- Ease of access. Because 802.11b is a global
standard, it is extremely easy to configure any
computer (portable or desktop) with an IEEE
802.11b-compatible network card to access the
network. Even visitors to an office that has a
Wi-Fi network can simply sit down and access the
network with their laptops, with only a small
amount of configuration. - 802.11b devices are growing more and more
common. According to one survey, over 18 million
WLAN-ready devices shipped in 2002, which was
over twice the number shipped in 2001. Most new
laptop computers now come standard with
integrated 802.11b wireless network interfaces. - Despite there being faster, more advanced wi-fi
technologies around the corner (802.11g, for
example), 802.11b looks like it is here to stay,
and will probably enjoy several more years as the
wireless networking standard.
39Wireless for Desktop/Laptop Computers WLAN
- Wi-Fi Hardware
- To establish a Wi-Fi network, you need at least
two pieces of hardware the wireless access point
(also called a base station), and the client
wireless network adaptor. - Other wireless technologies
- Despite the near universal adoption of 802.11b,
there are other wireless networking technologies
being used for wireless LANs. - Home RF
- Home RF deserves a mention because even though it
is slower than 802.11b (Home RF bandwidth has a
maximum of 1.6 Mbps), it is less expensive to
implement. However, the universal acceptance of
802.11b has all but pushed Home RF WLAN solutions
off the shelves.
40Wireless for Desktop/Laptop Computers WLAN
- Home RF
- Home RF deserves a mention because even though it
is slower than 802.11b (Home RF bandwidth has a
maximum of 1.6 Mbps), it is less expensive to
implement. However, the universal acceptance of
802.11b has all but pushed Home RF WLAN solutions
off the shelves. - Other IEEE 802.11 specifications
- IEEE 802.11a has been discussed above as a faster
alternative to 802.11b, though it has a shorter
range and is incompatible with 802.11b. IEEE
802.11g will be next generation of Wi-Fi,
combining the bandwidth of 802.11a with the range
of 802.11b. Also, wireless client adaptors are
being produced now that are dual-mode, meaning
that they can be switched between 802.11a and
802.11b (or .11g).
41Wireless for Desktop/Laptop Computers WLAN
- Bluetooth
- While not specifically designed for
high-bandwidth local area networking, Bluetooth
is still a decent solution for applications like
temporary networking devices together for the
purposes of one-way data transfers (downloading
Web pages or receiving e-mail), or for
synchronizing mobile devices to servers on a
local area network (like a PDA agenda).
42Wireless for Desktop/Laptop Computers Wireless
networks security
- Security is a very real concern when it comes to
Wi-Fi networks. The very same elements of the
technology that make it so easy for wireless
network adaptors to connect to a WLAN also make
it easier for intruders to force their way onto
the same networks. On its own, 802.11a and
802.11b technology has very little security. Most
wireless access point base stations will work
right out of the box - but have no security at
all. - To keep intruders from connecting to a Wi-Fi
access point, and taking advantage of other
computers connected, you need to implement some
sort of wireless security. 802.1x is an IEEE
specification for wireless security on 802.11a
and .11b connections, but to implement it
requires that your hardware meets the standard,
and you have software that can enforce it.
43Wireless for Desktop/Laptop Computers Wireless
networks security
- Fortunately, Windows XP has a built-in
implementation of 802.1x, so creating a secure
Wi-Fi network with Windows XP is a relatively
easy task, even for the non-computer savvy. - The next big thing in security is the IEEE
802.11i security specification, which is
scheduled for ratification in 2004. 802.11i will
establish a type of security called Advanced
Encryption System (AES), which makes it much more
difficult for hackers to find the keys needed to
access a wireless network
44Wireless for Desktop/Laptop Computers Wireless
networks security
A hotspot is anywhere within the accessable
radius of a WiFi network's signal.
- Warchalking
- Warchalking is the term given to the activity of
walking (or driving) around public places with an
open laptop, trying to find unprotected (or
intentional open) Wi-Fi hotspots. When a
warchalker finds such a spot, he or she will mark
it with a particular symbol, indicating to others
that unprotected wireless access is available at
that point. This is fine for marking networks
that are intentionally left open to the public,
but the additional network traffic that
recognition of a warchalking symbol can generate
on an unsuspecting home user's network can be
staggering.
45Wireless for Desktop/Laptop Computers Wireless
networks security
- Coffeehouse Wi-Fi
- Many businesses, especially bookstores and
coffeehouses, are providing Wi-Fi Internet access
in their locations as a way to draw more
customers. Some of these places offer the access
for free (such as the NewburyOpen network along
Newbury St. in Boston), while others charge for
access to the service like a regular Internet
Service provider. Starbucks is probably the most
well-known business to provide Wi-Fi Internet
access at many of their coffeehouse stores in the
United States. The service at Starbucks is not
free, but the price for access is competitive
with regular Internet access. McDonalds
Restaurants has announced that it will have
several hundred restaurants that will offer
high-speed wireless access by the end of 2003.
46Wireless Wireless for Handheld Computers
- The wireless technologies used in handheld
computers (PDAs, Pocket PCs, etc.) are more or
less the same as those used in cellular phones or
laptops. The key difference is how they're used.
47Wireless Wireless for Handheld Computers
- Internet Access
- Internet access can be achieved on handheld
computers in a number of ways. The oldest is
thanks to the cellular modem, connecting to a
cellular network and accessing Web content with
WAP-enabled applications. This allows the device
Internet access anywhere that cellular coverage
is available, but unless WAP 2.0 and 3G
technologies have been used, the content is
probably limited to text. - More and more handheld computers (like the Pocket
PC) are being shipped with internal 802.11b
adaptors. These handhelds can then connect to any
Wi-Fi hotspot, and use an Internet connection (if
available).
48Wireless Wireless for Handheld Computers
- Bluetooth, being extremely power-efficient for
batteries, is another possibility for Internet
access via a handheld computer. Bluetooth has low
bandwidth, so for large file downloads it's
probably not the best solution. But for simple
connection to a Bluetooth-enabled computer that
has shared Internet connection for applications
like Web browsing and receiving e-mail, Bluetooth
can be a good solution. - The last two technologies (Wi-Fi and Bluetooth)
can also be used to access local area networks.
Bluetooth, in fact, is ideal for syncing PDA
information with a computer or to a server across
a LAN.
49Wireless Wireless for Handheld Computers
- Peer-to-peer Connections
- Since very early on, handheld computers have been
designed to make peer-to-peer connections with
other handhelds of the same type. Most PDAs come
standard with an infrared port. Transferring data
from one PDA to another via the infrared port has
been nicknamed "beaming". Infrared transfer is
relatively slow compared to conventional
wireless-about the same speed as a computer's
parallel port. - 802.11b can be used for peer-to-peer connections,
but once again Bluetooth is probably the best
solution for handheld devices, thanks to its good
power consumption rate.
50Wireless Bluetooth
- As introduced earlier, Bluetooth is a wireless
technology broadcasting in the Wi-Fi spectrum
(2.4 - 2.5 Ghz) that is ideal for networking all
sorts of devices together.
51Wireless Bluetooth
- How does Bluetooth work?
- There are two key concepts to understanding
Bluetooth that a Bluetooth device is always
listening in a battery-friendly way to establish
a network connecting with other Bluetooth
devices, and that Bluetooth devices network
together in groups of eight called a piconet. - Establishing the Connection
- When not actively part of a network, a Bluetooth
device will stay in standby mode (consuming next
to no power), but will "wake up" every few
seconds to listen for invitations to join a
network. This means that a Bluetooth device in
standby mode really consumes very little power. - When the Bluetooth device hears an invitation to
start a connection, it becomes the "slave" to the
"master" device that initiated the connection,
and a piconet is formed. The master device in a
piconet still occasionally looks for other
Bluetooth devices in its range, to let them know
they can join the piconet.
52Wireless Bluetooth
- Piconet Communications
- A piconet has a limit of eight Bluetooth devices,
including the master, but there are ways to get
around this limitation and allow more Bluetooth
devices to take part in the network. - First, any device in a piconet can park itself,
where it still listens to the piconet traffic (so
it can jump back in if space is available), but
isn't actually communicating with the piconet. - Secondly, two or more piconets can be joined in
what is called a scatternet. A device in one
piconet may also exist as part of another piconet
and may function as either a slave or master in
each piconet. The advantage to this is that data
can be sent from a device in one piconet, through
the shared device, to a device on the second
piconet.
53Wireless Bluetooth
- What can you do now with Bluetooth?
- Bluetooth had a rocky start, and took a while to
get established. Only now are more devices being
made available that truly take advantage of
Bluetooth for versatile networking. Here are just
a few examples of what you can do with existing
Bluetooth devices.
54Wireless Bluetooth
- Cable-free office
- Bluetooth-enabled keyboards and other input
devices exist. By using Bluetooth, these devices
become compatible with many types of devices they
previously could not have been joined to. For
example, a Bluetooth keyboard could broadcast to
a desktop computer when in the office. But the
same keyboard could also be connected to a
handheld computer, to make it easier to type text
directly to the device. Bluetooth headsets (two
earphones and a microphone) can also be used to
connect with a variety of devices. The same
headset can be used to transmit voice between a
telephone connected to a land-based line, to a
cellular phone, or even to other Bluetooth
headsets
55Wireless Bluetooth
- Synchronizing data
- The same handheld computer with Bluetooth
technology can be synchronized to a laptop
computer, another handheld, a desktop computer,
or a cellular phone. With a collection of
Bluetooth devices, you can always take the same
address book or agenda anywhere with you,
regardless of what device you have. - Universal remote control
- Many mechanical devices can also be equipped with
Bluetooth. Cars can be enabled with Bluetooth to
be started from Bluetooth devices, or with the
right technology, you can initiate a cellular
phone call on a Bluetooth phone with controls
from the dashboard of a car.
56Wireless Bluetooth
- Universal remote control
- Many mechanical devices can also be equipped with
Bluetooth. Cars can be enabled with Bluetooth to
be started from Bluetooth devices, or with the
right technology, you can initiate a cellular
phone call on a Bluetooth phone with controls
from the dashboard of a car.
Wireless encompasses many types of devices and
many brands of technology, but the trick to
sorting through it all is to know exactly what
you need touse the technology for, then
branching out from there. There's a best
wireless solution for all computing needs. Now
that you know your technology, all that's left
is to find it.
57- My references
- Saad.alkhtani_at_yahoo.com
- Ebt_2000_at_hotmail.com