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Bluetooth 5 is here, but few accessories will support it before 2018
Bluetooth 5 is here, but few accessories will support it before 2018
If you’re in the market for a Bluetooth accessory,
there’s a good chance you should consider waiting until next year. The
two biggest smartphone manufacturers — Samsung and Apple — are moving
rapidly toward Bluetooth 5. The Galaxy S8 is already there and the next Galaxy Note and iPhone are also expected to adopt the technology.
When arguably the three biggest smartphones (I will hear
your arguments for the Pixel over the Galaxy Note) make the switch to
Bluetooth 5, the third-party accessory market will follow.
It’s not that the current devices on the market are
obsolete — far from it. The Bluetooth 4-4.2 market will survive for at
least a few more years. It’s that if you happen to purchase one of these
newer smartphones, you’ll be stuck with slower peripherals that won’t
take full advantage of the next generation of Bluetooth.
Why should you wait?
Bluetooth 5 is capable of transferring data at double the
speed of Bluetooth 4.2, and it can also work at much further distances.
Theoretically, your Samsung Galaxy S8 paired with a Bluetooth 5 speaker
can work up to 260 feet away from each other. Due to walls and general
terrain, they probably won’t work that far apart — much like Bluetooth
4.2 devices don’t really work all that well at the current 66-foot
limit. But it’s miles ahead of its predecessors.
Sure, you can buy that $100 Bluetooth 4.2 speaker today,
but if you’re planning on getting the iPhone 8 (or whatever it’s
called), the $100 Bluetooth 5 speaker you purchase in early 2018 may
work across your entire home, instead of just in the next room. Or your
Bluetooth headphones may work when you leave your phone in the office to
grab lunch from the kitchen. There are a thousand different scenarios
in which Bluetooth 5 will be an improvement over Bluetooth 4.2.
With a max range of around 800 feet, those improvements
will extend to IoT devices as well, allowing Bluetooth 5 to essentially
replace (or act as a backup to) Wi-Fi connectivity for smart home
devices.
How long will you have to wait for Bluetooth 5 gadgets?
Likely until early 2018. Companies haven’t started
building devices that support Bluetooth 5 yet, because the Galaxy S8 is
the only phone that currently supports the standard. But that will begin
to change over the next few months.
Anker says the earliest it will start selling Bluetooth 5
products is the end of this year, but more likely the beginning of
2018. “We'll keep testing during the next months,” an Anker spokesperson
said. “I would say the earliest we might have a Bluetooth 5 product
would be either late Q4 this year or Q1 2018.”
Incipio Group, the company behind Griffin, Braven,
Incase, and its eponymous brand says it won’t launch any Bluetooth 5
products this year, but Griffin does have some in the pipeline for the
first half of 2018.
“We could not identify any significant feature to make us
adopt it immediately at the risk of delaying development on certain
products,” an Incipio Group spokesperson said. “To really take advantage
of Bluetooth 5 features in an accessory, you need a handset or host
device on the other end that also supports the new standard and those
devices are pretty limited at the moment (with the exception of the
GS8).”
If you absolutely need a Bluetooth device now, you
shouldn’t hold off and suffer until the winter when we get an influx of
Bluetooth 5 devices. But if you’re just browsing, you should wait. The
next generation of Bluetooth accessories are on the way, and they will
be a major improvement over what we currently have.
The article was published on : theverge
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