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    Bluetooth Is Named After An Ancient Viking King Who United Denmark And Norway

    14 february 2021

    Here’s your random fact of the day: Bluetooth is named after an ancient Viking king who united Denmark and Norway.

    I mean, who isn’t pondering the origins of the ubiquitous data-transfer technology on this fine Wednesday? It’s in just about any electronic device you can get your hands on, such as laptops, tablets, phones, controllers, remotes and much more.

    You generally don’t really consider why things are called what they are. Is an orange called an orange because it’s orange or is orange called orange because of an orange? Why is a dictionary called a dictionary? And why is the everyday wireless tech called Bluetooth? We have the answer to the latter.

    King Harald ‘Bluetooth’ Gormsson reigned as King of Denmark and Norway in the late 10th century, taking up the throne after the death of King Gorm the Old of Denmark and the assassination of King Harald Greycloak of Norway.

    Harald is known for uniting the tribes of Denmark into a single kingdom, as well as converting the Danes to Christianity. His Bluetooth nickname came from his bad, darkly-coloured tooth.

     

     

    So, how does this Viking king’s legacy stretch all the way to Bluetooth technology in 1997? It’s thanks to Jim Kardach, an Intel worker key to the tech’s inception, who’d earlier read a book on Viking history.

    However, while King Harald died in 986 after trying to fight off a rebellion, Bluetooth is still the ruling wireless technology today.

    Once upon a time, when Iyaz’s Replay was dominating the charts, it was used to transfer songs to one another’s phones. Nowadays, its presence is incredibly efficient and far wider, whether it’s hands-free phone calls through your car’s speaker or booming music from your speaker in the shower.

     

    • Bluetooth Is Named After An Ancient Viking King Who United Denmark And Norway

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