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blueto

Blueto is a hypothetical open standard for wireless device communication intended for consumer electronics and Internet of Things (IoT). It aims to allow secure, low-power, low-latency data exchange between devices in homes, offices, and industrial settings, with an emphasis on interoperability across manufacturers and platforms.

Origin and development: The concept originated in a multi-institution collaboration known as the Blueto Initiative, formed

Technical overview: Blueto defines a modular protocol stack with an optional mesh networking layer, a transport

Implementation and adoption: While Blueto has been discussed in academic and industry forums, it has not achieved

See also: Bluetooth Low Energy, Zigbee, Thread, Matter, NFC.

in
the
late
2010s
to
explore
alternatives
to
established
short-range
protocols.
A
formal
specification
was
released
by
the
Blueto
Foundation
in
2020,
followed
by
ongoing
revisions
and
regional
adaptation
guidelines.
layer
for
reliable
and
best-effort
delivery,
and
an
application
layer
with
device
profiles
for
common
use
cases
such
as
smart
lighting,
wearables,
and
environmental
sensors.
Security
features
include
device
authentication,
ephemeral
session
keys,
and
encrypted
payloads.
The
standard
is
designed
to
support
over-the-air
updates
and
firmware
integrity
checks.
Blueto
specifies
both
licensed
and
open
portions
to
accommodate
chipset
diversity.
widespread
market
adoption
comparable
to
Bluetooth
Low
Energy
or
Zigbee.
Some
pilots
and
research
projects
have
demonstrated
interoperability
in
controlled
environments,
but
certification
programs
remain
limited.
The
status
of
Blueto
varies
by
region
as
regional
spectrum
and
regulatory
requirements
shape
implementation.