Acer Bluetooth Shuttle Product Sheet -Initial Version-
Hardware Specification of Acer System Overview of Bluetooth Shuttle PCMCIA interface Acer Bluetooth Shuttle is a Bluetooth PCMCIA product. It enables Bluetooth TM wireless technology for the desktop / laptop computers equipped with the PCMCIA interface, and support point-to-multiple-point pico-net. It provided a standard PCMCIA interface with following characteristics: • PCMCIA release 2.
§ Software Specification of Acer Bluetooth Shuttle Acer Bluetooth Shuttle is a high-performance, versatile stack driver solution for the PC that helps end-users seamlessly transition from a “ connected experience” to a “wireless experience”. It enables the Bluetooth wireless technology for the notebook or desktop PC. With Acer Bluetooth Shuttle, you can establish wireless links by your computer or notebook with other devices of Bluetooth ability.
Product Features § § § Full Bluetooth software stack support Baseband, LMP, HCI, L2CAP, SDP and RFCOMM. Support for Microsoft® Windows ® 98, ME and 2000. The Acer BT100 Shuttle software offers the following profiles: § Generic Access Profile Supporting device discovery and authentication. § Service Discovery Application Profile Supporting service discovery. § Serial Port Profile Bluetooth virtual COM ports for legacy applications.
System Overview The Acer Bluetooth Shuttle software consists of a software stack and some application. Service Discovery Application Serial Port Profile The core protocol stack is implemented as a subset of version 1.1 of the Bluetooth specification. At the bottom of the software stack resides the hardware driver. It transfers HCI commands or events between PC and PC card. Also, it passes HCI data to L2CAP layer. The main task of L2CAP is to multiplex the data of SDP and RFCOMM.
The following figure shows the structure of the system.
INSTRUCTIONS MANUAL FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION INTERFERENCE STATEMENT This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class B digital device, pursuant to Part 15 of the FCC Rules. These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference in a residential installation.