SolveYourProblem
Article Series: Bluetooth
Understanding Bluetooth Wireless Communication
Bluetooth
Basics In Simple English
Bluetooth technology has the potential to
give vast numbers of people the same mindset as a Ham radio
buff. Bluetooth technology delivers to the man on the street
a way to exchange information using wireless technology. Bluetooth
technology differs from the earlier forms of wireless technology
by offering a Personal Area Network (PAN).
What
is a PAN? It is a network that operates within a confined
space, a space much smaller than the Local Area Networks that
controlled the delivery of information in the first known wireless
systems. Using short-range radio signals, the devices in a
PAN exchange information between collections of diverse devices.
Bluetooth technology allows for the exchange of information
between a PDA, a mobile phone, a laptop, a PC, a printer, a
digital camera and other mobile devices.
The first wireless technology introduced to the public used
long-range radio signals, signals coming from satellites in
space. Bluetooth technology uses 2.4 GHz radio signals. These
short-range signals travel within a confined area. Therefore,
the Bluetooth technology normally provides a single individual
with either a mobile workstation or a mobile entertainment
center.
Because the Bluetooth technology facilitates communications
between mobile and stationary devices, the automobile industry
has included the Bluetooth technology in certain vehicles.
Acura, BMW, Toyota Prius and Lexus all supply car owners with
access to a PAN. Such devices allow the car owner to receive
messages about needed check-ups on parts of the car’s engine.
The science behind Bluetooth technology is not really very
confusing. Discovery of a way to promote the Bluetooth technology
has frustrated the marketers of that technology.
Their frustration stems largely from their misperceptions.
For an example of those misperceptions, one might examine the
comments on the website Extreme Tech. There one finds this
statement: “Bluetooth’s main competition is a piece of wire.
Wire is cheap, reliable and…so ubiquitous that you don’t even
notice it.”
That statement underlines the difficulty that the marketers
of the Bluetooth technology are going to have. There are in
fact members of our society who do notice and object to large
amounts of wire, especially when it is in a living room or
a family room. Because our technology has advanced so rapidly,
there are people alive today who remember a time when homes
did not have many electrical wires.
Such individuals, usually older individuals, would no doubt
welcome a way to let their grandchildren play computer games
without creating a confusing array of wires in an area of the
home where guests might be expected to appear. Such individuals
might represent the group of consumers most apt to purchase
devices with the Bluetooth technology, if only they could be
clear about what it is.
That is why this article began with a mention of the Ham radio
buffs. Many of our society’s oldest members recall the days
when they watched fathers, uncles of older brothers play with
simple radios. In fact, many of the first radio signals were
picked-up by the operators of hand-made radios. If those same
individuals could be encouraged to equate today’s Bluetooth
technology with yesterday’s simplistic radios, then perhaps
the market for the Bluetooth devices would suddenly take an
upswing.
The real trick may be in devising a way to present this imagined
marketing campaign. Obviously, it could not be presented using
the Bluetooth technology; the individuals in this suggested
target audience do not generally use Bluetooth technology.
Perhaps they could be enticed to buy Bluetooth devices through
the wise use of TV ads. However, the marketer would need to
pack a great deal of information into one 60-second ad.
The above statement has been written by a woman who, in the
year 2000, watched people in their 80s viewing TV ads for various
websites. It was clear to any younger people in the room that
those older and wiser souls did not understand what the ads
were trying to sell. No doubt the same would be true of any
short, Bluetooth ad that assumed familiarity with the more
“conventional,” wireless technology.
Maybe the sort of ad that would catch the interest of those
wizened souls would be one that showed someone tripping over
a bunch of wires. They might relate to that.
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SolveYourProblem.com : 2007
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