News | December 4, 2006

Cambridge Consultants Launches New Bluetooth Development Tool

Palo Alto, CA and Cambridge, UK - Cambridge Consultants has launched a powerful Bluetooth development tool that they say has helped Sound ID to commercialize a headset for the hard of hearing, which employs wireless communications to link an in-ear module with a remote microphone.

The xIDE software development kit from Cambridge Consultants allowed Sound ID to eliminate the need for a separate microprocessor in its in-ear headset, by exploiting the 'free' processor that comes as part of the Bluetooth chip, to control the overall hearing system. This resulted in savings in both real estate and the bill-of-materials. The approach also reduced power consumption - another area of performance for this type of product.

Sound ID's Personal Sound System looks like a small Bluetooth mobile phone headset. However, inside the device is a DSP that can be configured by an audiologist, or the user, to amplify sound based on individual preferences. The Bluetooth capability allows the ear module to link with a remote microphone that can be positioned to improve signal-to-noise ratio. It also acts just like a standard Bluetooth headset for a mobile phone, automatically switching from continuous amplification mode, to hands-free mode when a call is in progress.

The Bluetooth chip used is CSR's BlueCore device with embedded Flash memory, which includes an onchip XAP RISC processor. This processor's main task is to manage the Bluetooth protocol communications. But it has enough spare computing power to allow it to function as the application processor in a small 'hostless' Bluetooth systems such as a conventional headset, running software such as a hands free 'profile' and controlling a simple man-machine interface.

However, Sound ID's new sound system is sophisticated. The versatility of the ear module means that the processor has to run four types of Bluetooth application software: hands free and headset profiles for open connectivity with mobile phones, a custom profile that passes audio between the companion microphone and ear module, and a serial port profile for connecting to a PC for initial configuration. In addition, the processor controls the overall system, including the DSP, and user interface buttons and beeper. This includes managing configuration software that allows the DSP's amplification and spectral shaping characteristics to be personalized, and different sound settings to be selected during use.

The ability to perform all these functions was made possible by Cambridge Consultants' xIDE software development kit (SDK). This gives unrestricted access to the full native power of the XAP processor inside BlueCore, allowing users to bypass a software 'safety' layer that serves (for less experienced programmers) to protect the Bluetooth compliance of the chip. To help speed the project, Cambridge Consultants also contracted to write the application software for Sound ID, providing a complete system running on XAP that manages both the Bluetooth protocol communications and the sound system requirements, without compromising Bluetooth compliance. Cambridge Consultants also incorporated power conservation techniques to minimize the consumption of the system.

"The xIDE tool allowed us to implement the embedded system in a very economic way," says Michael Jones of Sound ID. "Without it, we would have needed additional microprocessors in both the ear module and Bluetooth microphone, which would have significantly increased the cost, size and power consumption of the product."

"The xIDE toolsuite provides Bluetooth developers with the development support they need to squeeze maximum performance out of the BlueCore device," says Cambridge Consultants' Tim Whittaker. "Engineers can exploit its facilities to rapidly create advanced single-chip embedded Bluetooth products such as Sound ID's complex multi-point system."

SOURCE: Cambridge Consultants