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Biotech Iphone Medicine Networking Wireless Networking Apple

iPhone Opens Up Bluetooth For Data 129

WildNahviss writes "Apple has loosened its tight grip on the iPhone and allowed a third party to develop a health device that exchanges data with the iPhone and their hardware. Is this the start of a trend for Apple that will relax constraints on non-audio Bluetooth use, or is this an exception? Does anyone know of any other devices for the iPhone that allows non-audio Bluetooth transmission of data?" Reader climenole points out an article about another health-sensor system, dubbed a "body area network," that is built to work with Android devices, but not via Bluetooth.
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iPhone Opens Up Bluetooth For Data

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  • by h4rr4r ( 612664 ) on Monday October 11, 2010 @06:58PM (#33864074)

    How much did you make for that comment?

    WM7 will be stillborn, android already has any market share it would have had and RIM will keep the business market.

  • by RingBus ( 1912660 ) on Monday October 11, 2010 @07:19PM (#33864268)

    It's like you have some bizarre version of Turrets Syndrome where instead of screaming obscenities you blurt out an endless stream of Microsoft marketing talking points.

  • by drolli ( 522659 ) on Monday October 11, 2010 @07:44PM (#33864488) Journal

    ...I get more and more happy i decided (even forgetting about them being late with 3g support) against buying one, as nice as it is (me = happy user of a E71/E63; the E71 could do a lot of things in 2006 which the iphone seems to learn slowly because Apple teamed up with the providers to fuck the users as hard as possible - sorry transferring contacts, appointments, data by BT and connectign to any BT device i bought or ever tested *is* a mandatory feature; not to mention that the E71 could communicate with my palm from 2003 by infrared.....).

  • by hitmark ( 640295 ) on Tuesday October 12, 2010 @07:46AM (#33867876) Journal

    And much of that was available on the Sony Ericsson T610 i got back in 2003/2004 (a featurephone). Bluetooth on US sold phones have been raped by carriers for ages, and is one reason why Nokia is a virtual no show in that market (they refused to let the carriers neuter phone features like voip and bluetooth).

    And this is why i groan each time i read a US tech blog talking about mobile tech from a US == world perspective...

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