Please wait while the page is being loaded Skip this advertisement >
Sunday | 7 September, 2008
ARN

Green Channel

Low energy Bluetooth breaks cover
And ZigBee had better watch out.
Peter Judge (Techworld.com) 28 April, 2008 11:44:15

Additional Resources
ARN Library

Newsletter Subscription

Sign up for our ARN newsletters!
The premier provider of daily news to the IT channel, covering business, technology, products, and services.
Your weekly summary of the latest news and opinions related to IT and the environment.
RSS Feeds

There's another advantage Zigbee might claim - it uses a published standard, IEEE 802.15.4 for its radio links. But standards aren't documents, says Heydon, they are what is sold in numbers in the market.

And using that radio doesn't even give ZigBee much benefit. "ZigBee doesn't control the radio design," says Heydon. "The only way to really build a low-power low energy system is to build it form the bottom all the way up to the top. The Bluetooth SIG is the only organisation that is capable of doing that."

Other benefits

Heile predicts 600,000 smart electric meters will have ZigBee in them this year, but Heydon thinks Bluetooth has bigger fish to fry: "They can have the electric meters," he says. "You want to control light switches when you are in a chair - and the device you will have with you is your mobile phone."

"The market Zigbee, has been talking about is reducing over time," says Heydon. "The big problem is getting volume and Bluetooth has a big tick box next to it."

It will be a very small additional cost to add low-energy Bluetooth to existing Bluetooth devices, he says, which means the cost of putting it in phones will be close to zero. Silicon companies can start adding it in mid-2009, when the standard is complete, he says, and it should spread rapidly in new mobile phones creating "an instant market" for accessories and home-installed sensors.

This allows other benefits, like presence. For instance, lights can turn on, or your stereo can wake up, when you walk into the room. A car can adapt itself to your preferences when you get in, and a computer can lock itself and maybe turn itself off, when you walk away.

Possibly the most useful thing, though, could be helping find lost items, says Heydon. "If you lose your phone, your watch will tell you where it is."

ARN Directory | Distributors relevant to this article
Market Place

ARN Member Login

 
Panel Sessions
  • ARN Panel Sessions: Day 3

    The last of our panel sessions recorded live at CeBIT 2008. Today, the topic is storage. Data is growing at an enormous rate, so what does the future hold?

Play
ARN news Channel Watch
  • Brian's bloopers

    It takes a long time to produce an episode of Channel Watch. Maybe you'll understand why after watching this...

Play
Business Continuity & Disaster Recovery Zone

When an IT disaster occurs, how handy it would be to push a button and start again as if nothing had happened.
Discover and learn more about CA XOSoft today.
ARN Vendor Directory
ARN Library

Microsoft® takes legal action against software pirates

Recently Microsoft took legal action against individuals and resellers for distributing and selling unauthorised Microsoft software.

Sponsored Links