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doc.: IEEE 802.11-07/2361r0
Submission
September 2007
John R. Barr, Motorola, Inc.Slide 1
Bluetooth Wireless Technology Overview
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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
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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.
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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.
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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
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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.
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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
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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)
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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.
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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)
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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
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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
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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
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Submission
September 2007
John R. Barr, Motorola, Inc.Slide 20
References
http://bluetooth.com/Bluetooth/Learn/Technology/Spec
ifications/Default.htm