posted
Apple is apparently working on a "superior" multi-buttoned mouse. Knowing Apple, it will be a graphic design triumph, but require that people completely rethink the way they use mice in order to function and will provide little actual technical benefit to the user. It may well float on a small cushion of air and have to be operated with fingers crossed.
Posts: 37449 | Registered: May 1999
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posted
Yeah, that sounds like something Apple would do. It'll be a flat touchpad. And everyone will say, "Oh, look, Apple reinvented the touchpad." And Apple will say, "No, look, it's the iMouse. A superior kind of mouse for superior people." And everyone else will say "No, it's a touchpad." And Apple will say, "Look, we're calling it an iMouse, and it's really pretty, so you have to like it. And it's $99. And we've put in Bluetooth."
Posts: 37449 | Registered: May 1999
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posted
Short range wireless connectivity. You can walk up to a Bluetooth printer with your notebook and print. You can connect keyboards and mice that way. You can send data to and from BT enabled mobile phones, which also use it for wireless headsets and the like.
Posts: 5422 | Registered: Dec 2001
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posted
HP makes a lot where it's an option. You usually see it more in business than the home realm, for that. You can also get bluetooth adapters that work with most printers. Most consumers see bluetooth in their PDAs and Phones, while businesses may have bluetooth capable printers. The HP site, for one example, shows a lot of devices that can interoperate via Bluetooth.
Of course scott, only the first two items on that page are bluetooth.
posted
I understand that Bluetooth is much bigger in Asia and Europe than it is here--American developers find that it's over-regulated. Although, if UWB takes off, I imagine the demand for Bluetooth will fade.
Posts: 4534 | Registered: Jan 2003
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