Hi Salah, Are you focus on Bluetooth like a strategic option in your company or do you use this technology like a hobby? I use this technology on a company project and we must pay USD200.000! for HCI(host controller interface) protocol!!!This mean we can't use for our product the BLUETOOTH logo and of course we can't take the information for to control the link-controller for our bluetooth chip set if we don't pay this tax to SIG(Special Interest Group). So I can't give you the exact info because I have an agreement with our manufacture( SiliconWave), but I can tell you this, you can use the radio modem chip from SiliconWave SiW1602 without the link-controller and without the logo BLUETOOTH and you can obtain the same big transfer rate 1Msimbol/s with 79 channels! The 2,4-2,5GHz band is free almost every where on the planet and this chip is designed to use this frequency! Of course you don't make a pico-net in the same way like in Bluetooth specifications and you can communicate with the Bluetooth system that use a link-controller.The radio modem chip is cheap in 1K pcs(USD10.5), but for 1 pcs is cca.USD40! On chip you have +4 dBm power and with USD1 you can easy obtain +20 dBm power(cca.50m between Rx and Tx).You can access the radio modem on SPI port of the PICs with 4MHz pic clock! I hope it helps you! Miki "Salah M." wrote: > Hello List, > I`d like to start a new project concerning remot-controlling ... any > information about wireless projects based on PIC MCU please...... is it > possible to control the BlueTooth module via the PIC ? most of the resources > that I got is talking about BT with AVR or ARM from Atmel but I am wondering > if I can do it with PIC . > > Regards > Salah. > > Hugle-Electronics,Inc. > Tokyo/Japan. > > -- > http://www.piclist.com hint: The PICList is archived three different > ways. See http://www.piclist.com/#archives for details. -- http://www.piclist.com#nomail Going offline? Don't AutoReply us! email listserv@mitvma.mit.edu with SET PICList DIGEST in the body