
All your Bluetooth are belong to us
Canadian outfit Wi-Lan has sued major computer makers,
accusing 19 top companies of infringing on a patent by selling laptops and
cellular handsets with Bluetooth technology enabled.
Wi-Lan has sued Apple, Dell, HP, and Intel, so it is not
thinking small. While Wi-Lan, based in Ottawa, isn’t likely to win an
injunction, it might use the court case to force small payments from a
lot of
companies who are not interested in a messy court case. The Wi-Lan
argues the sued companies violated US Patent No 5,515,369 by making
and/or selling various
products enabled with Bluetooth technology including cellular handsets
and
personal notebook computers.
According to the website of the US patent office the
patent was granted in 1996 and assigned to Metricom of California. It specifies
a method of method for frequency sharing and frequency punchout in frequency
hopping communications network. The method enables each node in a multimode network to
specify a random channel hopping sequence that it will use to for data transfer
and a means by which it can communicate that sequence ot other nodes in the
network.