
"Bluetooth Smart technology put us on a rocket ship of growth, with Bluetooth annual product shipment projections skyrocketing to more than 4.5 billion in the next five years," said Suke Jawanda, Bluetooth SIG CMO. "We updated the Bluetooth specification to address this projected growth, making changes to give developers more control in assigning a role to their product, limiting interference with other wireless technologies, and allowing Bluetooth Smart products to exchange data faster and maintain connections with less manual intervention."
The Bluetooth 4.1 release brings better cooperation between LTE radios and Bluetooth devices to avoid interference. The release also promises better connections, as reconnection time intervals will be more flexible and variable, thus devices can reconnect automatically when they are in proximity of one another. As an example, the consumer can leave the room and upon returning, two recently used devices reconnect without user intervention.
Bluetooth 4.1 also supports bulk data transfer. As an example, sensors that gathered data during a run, bike ride or swim can transfer that data more efficiently when the consumer returns home. As previously mentioned, Bluetooth 4.1 lays the groundwork for future IP-based connections between devices, similar to the way a router connects to multiple Wi-Fi enabled devices. The new spec adds a standardized way to create a dedicated channel, which could be used for IPv6 communications in the Core Specification.
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