Advantages And Disadvantages Of
Bluetooth
Bluetooth has a lot to offer with an
increasingly difficult
market place.
Bluetooth helps to bring with it the promise of freedom from
the cables and implicity in networking that has yet to be
matched by LAN (Local Area Network).
In the key marketplace, of wireless and
handheld devices, the closest competitor to Bluetooth is
infrared. Infrared holds many key features, although the
line of sight it provides doesn't go through walls or through
obstacles like that of the Bluetooth technology.
Unlike infrared, Bluetooth isn't a line of
sight and it provides ranges of up to 100 meters.
Bluetooth is also low power and low processing with an
overhead protocol. What this means, is
that it's ideal for
integration into
small battery powered devices. To put it short, the
applications with
Bluetooth are virtually endless.
Disadvantages
Bluetooth has several positive features and one
would be extremely hard pressed to find downsides when given
the current competition.
The only real downsides are the data rate and
security. Infrared can have data rates of up to 4 MBps,
which provides very fast rates for data transfer, while
Bluetooth only offers 1 MBps.
For this very reason, infrared has yet to be
dispensed with completely and is considered by many to be the
complimentary technology to that
of Bluetooth. Infrared has inherent security due to its
line of sight.
The greater range and radio frequency (RF) of
Bluetooth make it much more open to interception and
attack. For this reason, security is a very key aspect to
the Bluetooth specification.
Although there are very few disadvantages,
Bluetooth still remains the best for short range wireless
technology. Those who have tried it love it, and they
know for a fact that Bluetooth will be around for years to
come.
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