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TI embraces ultra low-power Bluetooth

Texas Instruments Inc. (TI) will develop chips for low-power devices based on a new short-range wireless Bluetooth specification, the company said Tuesday.

The move comes on the heals of a decision by Nokia Corp. earlier this month to roll its low-power Wibree technology into the new ultra low-power (ULP) Bluetooth specification.

While Bluetooth has been used mostly to connect larger devices such as headsets, keyboards and mouses to stereos and PCs, the new ultra low-power specification aims to connect much smaller button-cell battery-powered devices, like watches or sensors attached to a user’s body. ULP Bluetooth uses the same 2.4GHz frequency as Bluetooth.TI already produces chips for Bluetooth devices as well as devices based on the ZigBee ultra low-power specification.

The chip maker views ULP Bluetooth and ZigBee as “complementary” technologies. ZigBee, for instance, is a mesh networking technology designed to support thousands of nodes with some restrictions on quality of service and latency, according to the ZigBee Web site. By comparison, ULP Bluetooth is an ad hoc networking technology that links a smaller number of nodes to devices with high quality of service and low latency.

TI will develop chips for both types of ULP Bluetooth implementations: a single-mode implementation for watches, sensors and other tiny devices to communicate with each other; and a dual-mode implementation to communicate with both single-mode and traditional Bluetooth devices, such as handsets.

Pricing and product availability details were not disclosed.

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