ZDNet UK


Skip to Main Content

ZDNet.co.uk - Winner of Best Business Website 2007
  1. Home
  2. News
  3. Blogs
  4. Reviews
  5. Prices
  6. Resources
  7. Community
  8. My ZDNet

 

ZDNet UK RSS Feeds


IT Jobs

Mobile devices Toolkit

Mobile phone becomes a universal remote

Matthew Broersma ZDNet.co.uk

Published: 19 Jun 2000 09:15 BST

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly
  • Post Comment

Soon, your mobile phone won't just make calls -- it will program your VCR, store your personal calendar and even let you buy things in the high street.

All these applications are made possible by Bluetooth, a new wireless standard that is designed to allow all sorts of devices, from PCs to refrigerators, talk to each other -- often without human intervention. Where Bluetooth might find a real niche, however, is in the most popular piece of high-tech around: the mobile phone.

Mobiles, in Europe especially, have far outpaced the growth of both PCs and the Internet, and now companies such as Nokia and Ericsson are looking to turn these tiny devices into all-purpose terminals. They and many others were in Monte Carlo at the Bluetooth World Congress 2000 last week to show off their wares and map out Bluetooth's future.

Companies such as Toshiba and Sony are planning to put Bluetooth into all the products they make, including things like toasters, video recorders and microwave ovens. Once all those devices can talk to each other, the mobile phone handset could be outfitted to control them all.

"We're putting the mobile phone at the centre of the consumer's universe," says Jorgen Nordin, director of product management with Ericsson. "It will store your calendar, open your garage door, and connect to your [land-based] telephone line."

Bluetooth could be used with WAP (Wireless Application Protocol), the standard that is beginning to let Europeans surf the Net from their phones. For example, your VCR could include a simple WAP server, which you could access through your phone's microbrowser and program it to record next week's dramatic episode of EastEnders. Unlike a traditional remote control, you could do all this from another room.

Perhaps most dramatically, your phone could act as a wireless credit card -- an application many experts see as the real future for Bluetooth. The phone would store your credit information, which it would send to a Bluetooth receiver in the cash register; when you're ready to check out, you simply press "confirm" on the phone and you're done.

In the nearer term -- this year or next -- Bluetooth could have early popularity with wireless headsets and remote voice dialling for mobile phones. "The voice product is the killer application for now," says Ericsson's Nordin.

Take me to the Bluetooth special

Take me to the WAP Access Guide

See ZDII for US tech investor news.

See techTrader for more technology investment news, plus quotes and research.

What do you think? Tell the Mailroom. And read what others have said.

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly Print with Kyocera

Did you find this article useful?
56 out of 103 people found this useful


Full Talkback thread

0 comments


Company/Topic Alerts

Create a new alert from the list below:






Related Jobs

Want to work for a major Investment Bank?? ( Credit Risk / Energy )

One of the worlds largest Global Investment Banks are seeking a commodities credit risk analyst to join their European Headquarters based in Central ...

Credit Risk Project Manager Banking London City

PROJECT MANAGEMENT, JAVA, SYBASE, CREDIT RISK A fantastic opportunity for a Project Manager with solid Java and Sybase hands-on experience. You will ...

CREDIT DERIVATIVES JAVA DEVELOPER 700 PER DAY

The role is to work within their Credit Derivatives team, the successful candidate for this role will gain exposure to a wide range of interesting ...

Featured Talkback

Put simply, what is the compelling reason to pay ~$200 extra for an Eee with Windows XP? A Windows Eee won't come with any useful applications and you'll have to buy anti-virus software to boot. The truth about low cost computing is that nobody really cares whether the machine is running Windows or Linux as long as its cheap, its easy to use and it works.

By: dogStar

Read full story:
Asus to ship 60 percent of Eee PCs with Windows XP

On The Road Blog

iPhone heaven/iPhone hell

Steve Jobs owes me nearly two hours of my life back. Or at least he would do if I wasn't so chuffed with the iPhone that finally became mine after a bum-achingly long period propped... More

2 comments

The App store spells death to Jailbrea...

I'd love to say that the quality of Apps on the Apple App store is so superior to those made for jailbroken iPhones that no one would bother jailbreaking anymore. However, this is definitely... More

4 comments

Lenovo debuts new small-business noteb...

With Intel and Vodafone along for the ride, Lenovo today launched a brand-new SL range of small-business-focussed ThinkPads, refreshed the T series (performance), R series (mainstream)... More

Post a comment