Blue

Bluetooth Logo

My wife has been wanting to upgrade her cell phone to one that has a built-in camera.  So I figured I would get her a new phone as an early Christmas present.  So, off we went to local purveyor of fine cell phones and returned with a brand new Motorola RAZRTM V3r.  The “r” in the V3r denotes the color, which is “Metallic Red.”  And since the phone is Bluetooth® compatible, she also got one of those wireless speakers you see hanging on many people’s ears these days.

End of story?  Well not quite….

RAZR V3r
Since the new phone is Bluetooth® compatible, I did some looking around on Motorola’s web site and found a relatively inexpensive software package that allows you to upload/download/edit/synchronize/backup/restore the pictures, phonebook, event calendar and a number of other objects in the phone’s memory.  So I got out my credit card and downloaded the package.  I didn’t have a Bluetooth® interface adapter on my PC, so off to the local computer store I went to get one of those small Bluetooth® adapters to plug into one of my USB ports.

Now that I was armed with the software and the adapter, it was time to install and configure all this stuff and start communicating with the phone.  I had never paid much attention to Bluetooth® and this would be my first experience at installing it.  But not a problem, said I.  After all I had previously installed all sorts of network adapters and drivers in both Windows and Linux systems.

I installed the drivers for the adapter, plugged it into a USB port and the stuff did indeed work as advertised…the PC found the phone and the phone found the PC, and, as they say in the Bluetooth®world, the devices “bonded.”  But one “small” problem remained.  I couldn’t establish a data connection between the PC and the phone.  It took a while but I finally realized that Bluetooth® was using Win XP’s Dial Up Networking (DUN) service and the Point to Point (PPP) protocol to make a connection between the PC and the phone.  I won’t bore you with the gory details, but I finally got it working.  As it turned out, the root cause of the problem was that I had the wrong PPP security options configured.  Thinking about it after the fact, I guess it made sense that it used DUN and PPP….after all, it is a phone.

Now that I had the basic connection up and working, it was time to load the Motorola application software.  Once the application loaded, it automatically went looking for the Bluetooth® adapter…and of course did not find it!  And in an attempt to be overly helpful, the application kept insisting that I install a driver.  So I had to resort to doing a manual configuration to get working.  Once I got that done, the application synched up with the phone’s services and everything now worked as advertised.

The phone has two external interfaces: Bluetooth® wireless and a USB port.  If I had opted to plug in a cable and connect it to one of my PC’s USB ports, I probably would have had a much easier time of it as the phone would be viewed by the PC as just another USB device!

So here’s the moral of this story…”Keep it Simple Stupid!”

Notes:
  1. The Bluetooth logo and name are Registered Trademarks of the Bluetooth SIG.

  2. RAZR is a Registered Trademark of the Motorola Corporation.

2 thoughts on “Blue”

  1. Its a great phone…does all kinds of neat stuff…

    And, it was much easier the second time around. I installed the Bluetooth stuff on my laptop the other day and this time “I followed the instructions and paid attention.” So don’t be scared away by what I said in the initial post…

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