Current mesh models target control applications such as lighting control and sensor networks. These applications typically involve smaller packets, so the 1 Mbit/s speed should prove to be more than ...
The Bluetooth Special Interest Group (SIG), the group that oversees development of the widespread Bluetooth standard, has today unveiled the details about its new mesh networking standard. This ...
Learn from Integra Source’s experiences about Bluetooth mesh networking, how and where to use it. We’ll tell you about the design and operation principles of this protocol and compare it with similar ...
A year after unveiling Bluetooth 5, the short-range wireless networking technology's Special Interest Group (SIG) has announced support for mesh networking. This enables low-power, many-to-many device ...
You might associate Bluetooth with cutting the cable between your headphones and your phone, but Bluetooth Mesh aims to make it a ubiquitous backchannel for the Internet of Things. Launched today, ...
This file type includes high-resolution graphics and schematics when applicable. Utsav Ghosh, Senior Product Marketing Engineer, Cypress Semiconductor Communication between Bluetooth devices used to ...
Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. is The Verge’s executive editor. He has covered tech, policy, and online creators for over a decade. There’s a ...
Smart lighting has been a topic of conversation for quite some time. There are a number of different strategies available today, but with choice comes confusion. Without a single standard or approach ...
Imagine light fixtures that act as Bluetooth beacons, allowing smartphones to help visitors find their way around a building. Imagine a lighting system which can pinpoint the location of people and ...
Even with patchy Wi-Fi, this diner stays in touch—just the use case Bitchat aims to cover. tommao wang/Unsplash On Sunday, Twitter Co-Founder Jack Dorsey introduced Bitchat, a Bluetooth-powered ...
The fact is, radio technology is inherently unreliable. When several wireless technologies share the same radio band and multiple devices are communicating across it, interference is inevitable.