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Bluetooth
The name Bluetooth is taken
from the 10th century Danish King Harald Blatand - or Harold Bluetooth
in English. During the formative stage of the Trade Association
a code name was needed to name the effort. Over an evening discussing
European history and the future of wireless technology several felt
it was appropriate to name the technology after King Blatand. He
had been instrumental in uniting warring factions in parts of what
is now Norway, Sweden and Denmark - just as the technology is designed
to allow collaboration between differing industries such as the
computing, mobile phone and automotive markets. The code name stuck.
In Jelling, Denmark a monument can be found in a church yard that
celebrates both his achievements and those of his father the first
king of Denmark "Gorm the Old". Interestingly this particular
stone was lost for nearly six-hundred years after Harald had a small
war with his own son, Sven Forkbeard, over control of the country.
Sven "won" the argument (exiling his father in the process),
and since this runic stone also glorified Harald, Sven had it buried.
Only years later a farmer, curious about a large mound in his farm,
rediscovered the stone.
The logo itself was originally designed by a Scandinavian firm
at the time the trade association was announced to the public. Keeping
to the traditions of the name, the logo combines the runic alphabetic
characters "H" which looks similar to an asterisk and
a "B". Look carefully you can seen both represented in
the logo.
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