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Wireless Home Networking - Index of

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286<br />

Part IV: Using a <strong>Wireless</strong> Network<br />

� Go hands-free in the car: Face it — driving with a cell phone in your<br />

hands isn’t safe. Using a headset is better, but the best choice (other<br />

than not using your phone while driving) is to use a completely handsfree<br />

system, which uses a microphone and the speakers from your car<br />

audio system. This used to take a costly installation process and meant<br />

having someone rip into the wiring and interior <strong>of</strong> your car. If you<br />

bought a new phone, you probably needed to have the old hands-free<br />

gear ripped out and a new one installed. No more — Bluetooth cars are<br />

here, and they let you use any Bluetooth-enabled cell phone to go handsfree.<br />

Just set the phone in the glove box or dashboard cubbyhole and<br />

don’t touch it again. Keep your hands and eyes on the road!<br />

If your current car isn’t outfitted with Bluetooth, don’t despair. Dozens<br />

<strong>of</strong> Bluetooth retr<strong>of</strong>it kits are available on the market — ranging from<br />

simple speaker/microphone devices that plug into your 12-volt power<br />

source (the lighter, in other words) to custom-installed, fully integrated<br />

systems that can even use your car’s steering wheel controls.<br />

� Get your laptop on the Internet while on the road: We think that the<br />

best way to connect your laptop to the Internet when you’re out <strong>of</strong> the<br />

house is to find an 802.11 hot spot (we talk about them in Chapter 16),<br />

but sometimes you’re just not near a hot spot. Well, worry no more<br />

because if you have a cell phone and laptop with Bluetooth, you can use<br />

your cell phone as a wireless modem to connect to the Internet. With<br />

most cell phone services, you can establish a low-speed, dial-up Internet<br />

connection for some basic stuff (such as getting e-mail or reading<br />

text-heavy Web pages). If your cell phone system (and plan) includes<br />

a high-speed option (one <strong>of</strong> the 2.5 or 3G systems we talk about in<br />

Chapter 16), you can get online at speeds rivaling (although not yet<br />

equaling) broadband connections such as DSL — all without wires!<br />

Some cell phones have Bluetooth capabilities but have been artificially<br />

limited by the cell phone companies. For example, some Bluetooth phones<br />

have had their s<strong>of</strong>tware configured by your cell phone company in such a<br />

way that you can’t use the phone as a modem for your laptop, as described<br />

in the preceding bullet. There’s no easy way to know this up front — but it’s<br />

a good reason to read the reviews in sources such as CNET (www.cnet.com)<br />

before taking a leap.<br />

Bluetooth Smartphones and PDAs<br />

In addition to cell phones, the other category <strong>of</strong> device that’s seeing a great<br />

deal <strong>of</strong> action in the Bluetooth arena is the PDA category. The term PDA (personal<br />

digital assistant) encompasses a wide range <strong>of</strong> handheld computing<br />

devices — and therefore, PDAs are also <strong>of</strong>ten referred to as handhelds.<br />

The most common types <strong>of</strong> PDAs are

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