Toshiba Brings Bluetooth to Market
Toshiba ships first Bluetooth PC card and unveils new Satellite
notebooks.
Cameron Crouch, PC World
Friday, September 22, 2000
Bluetooth, the short-range wireless technology that connects devices,
may finally be ready for prime time with the release next week of
the Toshiba Bluetooth PC Card.
Toshiba plans to ship the first Bluetooth PC Card on Monday from
its ShopToshiba Web site. The $199 card can be used with notebook
PCs with a Type II PC Card slot, and a minimum configuration of
a 133-MHz Pentium processor, 64MB of memory, and either Microsoft
Windows 98 Second Edition or Windows Millennium Edition.
Bluetooth is a low-cost wireless radio transmission specification
for creating personal networks of up to eight devices at a distance
of 10 to 100 feet. The long-awaited technology is designed to replace
cables and link notebooks, printers, mobile phones, handheld devices,
and even car systems at data rates up to 1 megabit per second. Bluetooth
products are trickling out (See "Bluetooth Debuts in Bits and
Pieces.")
The Toshiba Bluetooth PC Card may have limited appeal until more
Bluetooth devices hit the market, but it at least shows that Bluetooth
is now more than just talk.
The Bluetooth Connection
Toshiba helped develop the specification as part of the Bluetooth
Special Interest Group, says Warren Allen, senior product planner
of wireless products at Toshiba America. "We're already shipping
a Bluetooth card in Japan."
For its Bluetooth PC Card, Toshiba licensed the technology from
Motorola, which also licenses Bluetooth to IBM.
"By midyear 2001, we'll offer built-in Bluetooth and 802.11b
with an antenna array in the display lid of our notebooks,"
Allen says. Toshiba also plans to release an 802.11b card for wireless
LANs. The 802.11b wireless specification is for networking over
larger areas and is faster than Bluetooth.
Toshiba's Bluetooth PC Card comes with a Bluetooth software suite
as well as SPANworks productivity and collaboration software. SPANworks
lets you control device authentication, and even share files or
conduct wireless chat. Device authentication is the way Bluetooth
users can deny or accept communication with other Bluetooth devices.
The card will automatically identify any Bluetooth device within
range, Allen says.
Early Devices Lonely
Of course, Bluetooth communications are limited until more Bluetooth-enabled
devices hit the market. Until these arrive, the most valuable use
of the technology will probably be sharing files between two notebooks
using Bluetooth PC Cards.
"Through SPANworks or Windows Explorer, you can send a compressed
version of a presentation so that, as the presenter pages through,
the pages flip on the other connected machines," Allen says.
"You can also send vCards (a form of electronic business card
from Versit) from [Microsoft] Outlook."
Toshiba successfully demonstrated wireless chat between two notebooks
via Bluetooth cards. Power drainage, a key factor in any kind of
mobile computing, is fairly minimal with the Bluetooth PC Card,
Allen says.
"It uses about 70 milliamps at 2.7 watts," he says. "That's
less than an internal modem card, which uses about 200 milliamps."
Vendors Promise Support
Bluetooth will become more useful as devices proliferate. Unlike
infrared, Bluetooth lets you use a phone as a wireless modem for
your laptop without taking the phone out of a bag. Or you could
use a printer without cables and network access.
"Bluetooth would be great on a plane where you could wirelessly
tap into the plane's already existent Internet connection,"
Allen says. "Boeing has demonstrated Bluetooth connectivity
is safe on planes, but airlines will likely wait for Bluetooth to
become successful among consumers before they deploy it."
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