+ All Categories
Home > Documents > 11 07 2361-00-0000 Blluetooth r Wireless Technology Overview

11 07 2361-00-0000 Blluetooth r Wireless Technology Overview

Date post: 07-Apr-2018
Category:
Upload: pradeep-kumar
View: 215 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend

of 20

Transcript
  • 8/6/2019 11 07 2361-00-0000 Blluetooth r Wireless Technology Overview

    1/20

    doc.: IEEE 802.11-07/2361r0

    Submission

    September 2007

    John R. Barr, Motorola, Inc.Slide 1

    Bluetooth Wireless Technology Overview

    Notice: This document has been prepared to assist IEEE 802.11. It is offered as a basis for discussion and is not binding on the contributing individual(s) or organization(s). The material inthis document is subject to change in form and content after further study. The contributor(s) reserve(s) the right to add, amend or withdraw material contained herein.

    Release: The contributor grants a free, irrevocable license to the IEEE to incorporate material contained in this contribution, and any modifications thereof, in the creation of an IEEEStandards publication; to copyright in the IEEEs name any IEEE Standards publication even though it may include portions of this contribution; and at the IEEEs sole discretion to permit

    others to reproduce in whole or in part the resulting IEEE Standards publication. The contributor also acknowledges and accepts that this contribution may be made public by IEEE 802.11.

    Patent Policy and Procedures: The contributor is familiar with the IEEE 802 Patent Policy and Procedures , including the statement"IEEE standards may include the known use of patent(s), including patent applications, provided the IEEE receives assurance from the patent holder or applicant with respect to patents

    essential for compliance with both mandatory and optional portions of the standard." Early disclosure to the Working Group of patent information that might be relevant to the standard is

    essential to reduce the possibility for delays in the development process and increase the likelihood that the draft publication will be approved for publication. Please notify the Chair

    [email protected] as early as possible, in written or electronic form, if patented technology (or technology under patent application) might be incorporated into a draft standard being

    developed within the IEEE 802.11 Working Group. If you have questions, contact the IEEE Patent Committee Administrator a t .

    Date: 2007-09-19

    Na me Co mpany Addre ss Phone email

    John R. B arr Mot orola, Inc. 1303 E. Alg onquin

    Road, Schaumburg, IL601 96 USA

    847-962-5407 John. Barr @Motorola.com

    Authors:

  • 8/6/2019 11 07 2361-00-0000 Blluetooth r Wireless Technology Overview

    2/20

    doc.: IEEE 802.11-07/2361r0

    Submission

    September 2007

    John R. Barr, Motorola, Inc.Slide 2

    Abstract

    Overview ofBluetooth wireless technology, the

    Bluetooth SIG, and relationship to IEEE 802.11

    specifications and their use withBluetooth

    enabledproducts. Presented for the purpose of increasing

    awareness ofBluetooth SIG activities related to co-

    existence and use of IEEE 802.11 wireless technology in

    cooperation withBluetooth wireless technology.

    The Bluetooth word mark is a registered trademark owned by the Bluetooth SIG, Inc.

  • 8/6/2019 11 07 2361-00-0000 Blluetooth r Wireless Technology Overview

    3/20

    doc.: IEEE 802.11-07/2361r0

    Submission

    September 2007

    John R. Barr, Motorola, Inc.Slide 3

    Bluetooth SIG, Inc. Seven Promoter Member Companies:

    Ericsson, Intel, Lenovo, Microsoft, Motorola, Nokia, Toshiba

    Owners ofBluetooth Specification Copyright

    285+ Associate Member Companies

    Allowed to contribute to specification development

    Early access to draft specifications

    Favorable rates for design/product qualification

    Membership fee based on company size ($7.5 - $35K)

    9,000+ Adopter Member Companies

    Allowed to create and qualify designs/products

    Do not pay any member ship fees

    Any company incorporatingBluetooth wireless technology into products, using the

    technology to offer goods and services or simply rebranding a product with

    Bluetooth wireless technology must become a member of the Bluetooth SIG.

  • 8/6/2019 11 07 2361-00-0000 Blluetooth r Wireless Technology Overview

    4/20

    doc.: IEEE 802.11-07/2361r0

    Submission

    September 2007

    John R. Barr, Motorola, Inc.Slide 4

    BLUETOOTH SIG OVERVIEW Approximately 30 staff members

    Offices in Bellevue, Malmo and Hong Kong

    Key Functions:

    Publish Specifications Qualification Program

    Promote the Technology

    9000+ Total Members 58% increase in past 12 months

    Bluetooth.org (members)

    Bluetooth.com (industry)

    429-Jul-11

    Membership Growth

    Membership Tota

    0

    1000

    2000

    30004000

    5000

    6000

    7000

    8000

    9000

    10000

    Apr

    -10

    Jun-10

    Aug

    -10

    Oct

    -10

    Dec

    -10

    Feb-

    11

    Apr

    -11

    Jun-11

    Aug

    -11

  • 8/6/2019 11 07 2361-00-0000 Blluetooth r Wireless Technology Overview

    5/20

    doc.: IEEE 802.11-07/2361r0

    Submission

    September 2007

    John R. Barr, Motorola, Inc.Slide 5

    Specifications

    All adoptedBluetooth specifications are publiclyavailable on Bluetooth.com:

    http://bluetooth.com/Bluetooth/Learn/Technology/Specifications/D

    efault.htm

    Latest specification (Core Specification v2.1 + EDR): Secure Simple Pairing

    Enhanced Power Optimization

    Improved Security

    Next specification (2Q08) will include ability to utilizeadditional radio technologies to enable high speedBluetooth applications.

  • 8/6/2019 11 07 2361-00-0000 Blluetooth r Wireless Technology Overview

    6/20

    doc.: IEEE 802.11-07/2361r0

    Submission

    September 2007

    John R. Barr, Motorola, Inc.Slide 6

    History

    Founded in September 1998 by five companies

    Bluetooth 1.0 specification released in 1999 (Nine promoters)

    COMDEX Best of Show Technology Award in 1999

    2000: First mobile phone, PC Card and headset products, andprototypes of mouse, laptop and USB dongle.

    2001: Printer, laptop, hands-free car kit

    2002: Keyboard and Mouse, GPS receiver, digital camera

    IEEE 802.15.1-2002 based onBluetooth 1.0b specification

    2003: MP3 player, FDA-approved medical system (1M/week)

    2004: Stereo headphones, 2.0 + EDR, 250 million devices (3M/week)

    2005: Sunglasses (5M/week)

    IEEE 802.15.1-2005 based onBluetooth 1.2 specification

    2006: Watch, picture frame, alarm-clock radio (10M/week)

    2007: Television, 9,000th member, 2.1 + EDR, here at IEEE 802.11meeting

  • 8/6/2019 11 07 2361-00-0000 Blluetooth r Wireless Technology Overview

    7/20

    doc.: IEEE 802.11-07/2361r0

    Submission

    September 2007

    John R. Barr, Motorola, Inc.Slide 7

    BluetoothMarket

    Installed base ofBluetooth enabled products reached

    1 Billion devices in November of 2006.

    Every week, 13 millionBluetooth units are shipped.(~675 million per year or 21 every second)

    Every working day, more than five newBluetooth

    enabled products are qualified. (~1300 per year)

    Broad surveys have shown that theBluetooth brand is

    recognized by more than 75% of respondents world-

    wide. (Millward Brown internet survey for Bluetooth SIG: Bluetooth.org)

  • 8/6/2019 11 07 2361-00-0000 Blluetooth r Wireless Technology Overview

    8/20

    doc.: IEEE 802.11-07/2361r0

    Submission

    September 2007

    John R. Barr, Motorola, Inc.Slide 8

    BluetoothQualification Program

    Bluetooth Qualification requires certain testingstandards for all designs and products which use theBluetooth wireless technology.

    Qualification is a necessary pre-condition of theintellectual property license for theBluetooth wirelesstechnology.

    Qualification is also a necessary prerequisite in order toapply theBluetooth trademark to a design or product.

    Bluetooth Profile Tuning Suite has been developed as areference test system to ensureBluetoothinteroperability.

  • 8/6/2019 11 07 2361-00-0000 Blluetooth r Wireless Technology Overview

    9/20

    doc.: IEEE 802.11-07/2361r0

    Submission

    September 2007

    John R. Barr, Motorola, Inc.Slide 9

    TheBluetooth Wireless Experience: Replaces cables connecting portable and/or fixed devices while

    maintaining high levels of security,

    Robust, low power, low cost solution,

    AnyBluetooth enabled device, almost everywhere in the world,

    can connect to otherBluetooth enabled devices in proximity, Bluetooth enabled devices with common profiles work together

    to provide a uniform user experience.

    http://bluetooth.com/Bluetooth/Press/SIG/Bluetooth_SIG_LAUNCHES_NEW_PROGRAM_FOR_ENHANCED_VISIBILITY

    _OF_IBLUETOOTHI_FUNCTIONALITY.htm

    HEADSET PRINTING TRANSFER MUSIC HID

  • 8/6/2019 11 07 2361-00-0000 Blluetooth r Wireless Technology Overview

    10/20

  • 8/6/2019 11 07 2361-00-0000 Blluetooth r Wireless Technology Overview

    11/20

    doc.: IEEE 802.11-07/2361r0

    Submission

    September 2007

    John R. Barr, Motorola, Inc.Slide 11

    Billions ofBluetooth

    -enabled DevicesMotorola expects that over 75% of our mobilephone production will includeBluetooth by 2007.

    Bluetooth-

    enabled Devic

    0200400600

    800100012001400160018002000

    2005 2008 2011

    Other

    Headsets

    Handsets

    So rce IMS

    Sept.2006

  • 8/6/2019 11 07 2361-00-0000 Blluetooth r Wireless Technology Overview

    12/20

    doc.: IEEE 802.11-07/2361r0

    Submission

    September 2007

    John R. Barr, Motorola, Inc.Slide 12

    BluetoothMobile Handset Use Cases

    Headset and Hands Free Operation in Vehicles

    Synchronization of Personal Information

    Remote Access Link for PCs Moving Digital Images, Video Clips, and Music

    Streaming Music to Other Devices

    Printing of Digital Images

    Remote Control of Other Devices

    Integration with DLNA/UPnP

  • 8/6/2019 11 07 2361-00-0000 Blluetooth r Wireless Technology Overview

    13/20

    doc.: IEEE 802.11-07/2361r0

    Submission

    September 2007

    John R. Barr, Motorola, Inc.Slide 13

    Future ofBluetooth

    Wireless Technology

    Expect to ship 2 Billion devices in 2011

    Ultra Low Power devices

    Suitability for high speed applications for digital imaging, music,and video transfer

    Improved interoperability

    Bluetooth Wireless Experience

    Bluetooth Alternate MAC/PHY Approach

    Bluetooth link used to discover peer device, authenticate, discovercapabilities (e.g., 802.11), and initiate operation

    802.11 link enabled and used when higher performance required

    802.11 link idled when operation completed

  • 8/6/2019 11 07 2361-00-0000 Blluetooth r Wireless Technology Overview

    14/20

    doc.: IEEE 802.11-07/2361r0

    Submission

    September 2007

    John R. Barr, Motorola, Inc.Slide 14 1429-Jul-11

    GENERIC ALT MAC/PHY

    ARCHITECTURE

    The AMP architecture modifies the

    standardBluetooth architecture by

    enabling multiple alternate radios

    under L2CAP Discovery, connection set up and low

    power connections still use the 2.4GHz

    radio

    The new AMPs are used as high speed

    channels

  • 8/6/2019 11 07 2361-00-0000 Blluetooth r Wireless Technology Overview

    15/20

    doc.: IEEE 802.11-07/2361r0

    Submission

    September 2007

    John R. Barr, Motorola, Inc.Slide 15

    802.11 Alternate MAC/PHY (AMP) Bluetooth/802.11 combo chips on the market

    Both technologies in the mobile device

    Bluetooth in ~50% of mobile phones (500M in 2007)

    802.11 only in 20M mobile phones in 2007

    Leverage 802.11 in AMP

    Enable high-speed use cases

    Create market that will increase Bluetooth+802.11 in mobile

    devices to more than 50% of TAM by 2010 (~600M devices) Bluetooth market 1B/year by 2009

    Current 802.11 market projection only 500M/year by 2009

    Linkage with Bluetooth could double 802.11 market by 2010

    1529-Jul-11

  • 8/6/2019 11 07 2361-00-0000 Blluetooth r Wireless Technology Overview

    16/20

    doc.: IEEE 802.11-07/2361r0

    Submission

    September 2007

    John R. Barr, Motorola, Inc.Slide 16 1629-Jul-11

    Synchronization with 802.11 AP Example

    Synchronization

    Use Case

    Mobile phone

    discovers PC using

    Bluetooth technology

    and sets up an 802.11

    MAC/PHY

    connection for a high

    speed

    synchronization

    application

    802.11 Co ectio

    (Web access)

    802.11

    Co ectio

    (V IP)

    Bluetooth 802.11

    Connection

    802.11

    AP

    I ter et

    (wired)

  • 8/6/2019 11 07 2361-00-0000 Blluetooth r Wireless Technology Overview

    17/20

    doc.: IEEE 802.11-07/2361r0

    Submission

    September 2007

    John R. Barr, Motorola, Inc.Slide 17 1729-Jul-11

    Synchronization with 802.11 AP Example

    Synchronization

    Use Case

    Mobile phone

    discovers PC using

    Bluetooth technology

    and sets up an 802.11

    MAC/PHY

    connection for a high

    speed

    synchronization

    application

    802.11 Co ectio

    (Web access)

    Bluetooth Connection

    802.11

    AP

    I ter et

    (wired)

    802.11 Connection

  • 8/6/2019 11 07 2361-00-0000 Blluetooth r Wireless Technology Overview

    18/20

    doc.: IEEE 802.11-07/2361r0

    Submission

    September 2007

    John R. Barr, Motorola, Inc.Slide 18 1829-Jul-11

    Synchronization without 802.11 AP

    Example

    Synchronization

    Use Case

    Mobile phone

    discovers PC usingBluetooth technology

    and sets up an 802.11

    MAC/PHY

    connection for a high

    speed

    synchronizationapplication

    Bluetooth

    Connection

    802.11 Connection

  • 8/6/2019 11 07 2361-00-0000 Blluetooth r Wireless Technology Overview

    19/20

    doc.: IEEE 802.11-07/2361r0

    Submission

    September 2007

    John R. Barr, Motorola, Inc.Slide 19

    POTENTIAL COLLABORATION AREAS

    Liaisons have been identified (IEEE 802.11 and WFA)

    Evaluate common use cases and market requirements

    Ensure reasonable levels of coexistence Identify areas where improvements to 802.11 standards are

    desired

    1929-Jul-11

  • 8/6/2019 11 07 2361-00-0000 Blluetooth r Wireless Technology Overview

    20/20

    doc.: IEEE 802.11-07/2361r0

    Submission

    September 2007

    John R. Barr, Motorola, Inc.Slide 20

    References

    http://bluetooth.com/Bluetooth/Learn/Technology/Spec

    ifications/Default.htm


Recommended