If you had a M$ keyboard AND mouse, I don’t think you’d have much problem. Or if you had a Logitech keyboard AND mouse. But I don’t think crossing brands is going to happen. Sorry.
Not for existing equipment, no, no way to do so. If you were starting anew, if you made sure your gamepad, keyboard, and mouse were all bluetooth based, you could use a single bluetooth receiver on your computer, and your laptop might already have it built in.
IE if you bought all these, they could be made to work together:
Very interesting - so any bluetooth device should, in theory, work with a bluetooth receiver on the computer? What is the upper limit to the number of connections?
Up to 7 in theory, but real-world bandwidth issues might cause issues before you actually reach that.
Keep in mind that Bluetooth operates at 2.4 GHz, an unlicensed part of the spectrum shared by WiFi, microwave ovens, cordless telephones, light controls, other wireless devices, and so on… and so it’s hard to get a perfectly clean wireless signal unless you’re in a secluded area. Bluetooth also just doesn’t have much power to begin with, so the range and reliability can be significantly decreased versus those special wireless dongles you have that don’t have to adhere to Bluetooth’s standardized limits.
Right, although Bluetooth is going to have enough range to use a keyboard/mouse/gamepad right in front of your computer, or on the sofa in front of your TV (the PS3 uses bluetooth controllers & headsets, for example).
Just for clarification (and further information), since this is GQ. Bluetooth has various power classes. According to Wikipedia:
Most people reading this won’t be doing that. Your keyboard and mouse are probably class 2.
(I started writing Bluetooth stacks back when the spec was at 0.88, if I recall correctly. Been a while since I touched it at that level, though.)