Why is Bluetooth still popular?

I bought my first wireless head set yesterday.
Skullcandy Smokin’ Buds. It includes a microphone. Odd name. My daughter recommended them and told me they are comfortable to wear.

Easy install. Once I remembered to turn on the Bluetooth feature on my Android phone. It detected them easily. I may eventually buy a printer that supports Bluetooth.

I’m curious why headphones still use Bluetooth?

Wouldn’t it be more efficient to use the normal wireless feature that the phone already has?

Friends have told me to shut off Bluetooth when I’m not using it. Apparently it drains the phones battery.

A typical smartphone has 3 types of wireless features: the connection to the cellular network (voice, 3G, LTE, etc), WiFi, and Bluetooth.

Using a cellular network to connect to a headphone is just silly - you’d have to send the signal to the tower, and have it send it to your headphone - which needs its own SIM card and at least 3G connection. Huge waste of power, bandwidth, money, etc.

WiFi is a possibility, but you’d have to set up the headphone to connect to your WiFi network, or have the phone create a WiFi hotspot and have the headphone connect to that. Either way it’s an inconvenience. Also, you need a big battery on the headphone because WiFi uses a fair amount of power.

Bluetooth, on the other hand, is designed to connect an accessory to a host computer. Connecting a headphone to a smartphone is exactly the type of use it’s designed to do. And it’s a widely used standard, used not just on headphones/headsets but also smart watches, mouses, keyboards, styluses, location trackers, etc. It’s a 2-way communications protocol, so you can put control buttons on headphones. And there are more and more different types of Bluetooth devices becoming available. For example, I just bought a temperature/humidity monitor that syncs with my phone via Bluetooth.

:smiley: Made my day.

Not much, if it’s just sitting idle. Unless you’re regularly running out of battery, is it worth it to you to do whatever extra step you have to do to turn the bluetooth on/off every time you want to use it?

I’ll try leaving it on. See how my battery does.

Turning it on/off requires going into Android setup. Press the gear icon. Wi-Fi and Bluetooth are the first two options.

What version of Android are you using? You have been able to turn Bluetooth on and off from the quick settings since at least Lollipop. Just a quick swipe from the top of the screen and you can then toggle it on or off.

I leave bluetooth on all of the time, so I don’t forget when I get in the car. When I check my battery usage stats at the end of a day, bluetooth is negligible. Just leave BT on.

“Why is Bluetooth still popular?”

Because Apple or Samsung or Sony or whoever haven’t yet come up with a closed-proprietary equivalent they can convince us is worth paying a fat bundle for.

Bluetooth uses less power, and is easier to set up.

I know on some of my phones, as they got older, I’d get into the habit of turning bluetooth on and off when I’d get in and out of the car, it’s not that big of a deal. OTOH, if you have a good battery and you regularly go to bed with plenty of charge left, there’s no real reason not to just leave it on all the time. And, with that, if you’re going to toggle BT, you may want to toggle wifi as well (just be careful not to blow through all your data because you’re streaming at home with wifi off)

Like Cyros said, with newer Android versions/phones you can just pull down from the top and easily toggle BT on and off, but on all my older ones, I had a widget on my home screen that did the exact same thing.

Further more, you can put the Gear Icon on your home screen as well. Go to your applications, hold down the Settings/gear icon and put the shortcut where ever you want it. I have mine there from when I first got the phone and was playing with all the settings a lot, however, if you do have a recent android phone, that gear icon also shows up when you pull the top shade down.

Bluetooth is fine. Does it’s job well. No problem with it at all?

It’s kind of strange to refer to Bluetooth as popular. It is not popular, it is ubiquitous because it is an IEEE standard with universal industry support for the purpose it serves, Personal Area Network (PAN) connectivity. Just you and your personally owned devices, talking to each other. We don’t need no stinking infrastructure!

Still popular?

What alternative are you proposing?

I’ve always wondered the opposite: why you can’t get a wider range of computer peripherals that use Bluetooth, thus freeing up some USB ports. I don’t have anything against USB, mind you — if laptops came with 8 of them the need for bluetooth keyboards and mice would not arise. I may indeed seek out a bluetooth headset, since my Logitech rechargeable just died.

Bluetooth is significantly slower than USB 2.0, and vastly slower than USB 3.1, so only low-speed peripherals (like Mice or Keyboards or low-fi Audio) make sense over Bluetooth.

For the OP:
Here’s the Venn diagram of wireless standards, which shows why each standard has a niche -

http://www.embedur.com/img/IoT-Technologies-Range-vs-Rate.png

Here’s one that compares the data rate to the power consumption:

I’ve been proposing flag semaphore.

Just remembered, you can use Google Now to do this too. “Ok Google, turn off/on bluetooth”.

I’ve learned a lot from this thread. I’ve seen people wearing the ubiquitous Bluetooth earpiece for at least 15 years. I incorrectly thought of Bluetooth as outdated. I understand now that it fills an important niche in technology. It’ll be around for quite awhile.
Thank you for setting me straight.

I like the Bluetooth shortcut on Android’s pull down shade. :smiley: very glad someone pointed that out. Much quicker than clicking the gear icon.