Sunday, September 30, 2007

Bluetooth Application Developer’s Guide: The Short Range Interconnect Solution

Bluetooth Application Developer’s Guide: The Short Range Interconnect Solution

David Kammer, «Bluetooth Application Developer’s Guide: The Short Range Interconnect Solution»
Publisher: Syngress Publishing, Inc | ISBN: 1928994423 | PDF | 4.25 MB | 561 pages | 2002 Year

Every so often, a new technology comes along that, by its very nature, will change the world.The automobile, the television, and the Internet are obvious examples of technologies whose impact upon the entire population has been so far-reaching that it is truly beyond measure. Bluetooth is not one of these technologies. Despite the massive amount of media hype that has surrounded it, the effect of Bluetooth on the average person will be more like the invention of the automatic transmission than the invention of the car itself: it will make things easier for the user, but not fundamentally change the nature of the way we live and work. Simply put, for the average person, Bluetooth will probably merit a “Cool!” or a “What will they think of next?”
response, but probably won’t leave them stunned or slack-jawed.This is not to say that Bluetooth will be unimportant. I’ve invested several years working on Bluetooth, and I think it will be a valuable technology that millions of people will use, but I also think it’s important to be realistic about it.
There is, however, a small group of people for whom I think Bluetooth could
fundamentally change the way things are perceived, and if you are reading this introduction, in all probability you are one of those people—a software developer. Traditionally, software developers have tended to look at the communication between two devices in terms of big and small, primary or secondary (terminal and mainframe,client and server, apparatus and accessory).While these terms are certainly still relevant in some situations, Bluetooth definitely presents us with scenarios in which the lines become blurry. If two people exchange business cards between PDAs, which one is
the client and which one is the server? Traditionally, both a cell phone and a printer might be considered accessories, but when you use Bluetooth to print an SMS message from your phone, which one is the accessory? We may still use the terms client and server to refer to certain aspects of an interaction (like who initiates the connection), but it is easy to see that many of the other ideas and assumptions associated with these terms are no longer relevant.


Chapter 1 : Introducing Bluetooth Applications
Chapter 2 : Exploring the Foundations of Bluetooth
Chapter 3 : Power Management
Chapter 4 : Security Management
Chapter 5 : Service Discovery
Chapter 6 : Linux Bluetooth Development
Chapter 7 : Embedding Bluetooth Applications
Chapter 8 : Using the Palm OS for Bluetooth Applications
Chapter 9 : Designing an Audio Application
Chapter 10 : Personal Information Base Case Study
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