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  • What kinds of physical connections are provided by baseband data packets?

    * Question

    What kinds of physical connections are provided by baseband data packets?

    * Answer

    In Bluetooth systems, the baseband layer supports two types of physical connections, each optimized for different traffic patterns and quality-of-service requirements.

    1. SCO (Synchronous Connection-Oriented) Link

    A circuit-switched, periodic connection used for real-time, delay-sensitive data.

    Key Features

    • Fixed transmission intervals
    • Guaranteed bandwidth
    • Low latency
    • Typically used for voice or audio channels (e.g., classic Bluetooth headset audio)

    SCO links deliver baseband packets at regular time slots, ensuring continuous data flow.

    2. ACL (Asynchronous Connection-Less) Link

    A packet-switched connection used for general data communication.

    Key Features

    • Flexible, asynchronous transmission
    • Higher throughput than SCO
    • Retransmissions supported for reliability
    • Suitable for bulk data, control messages, and non-real-time applications

    Examples include file transfer, device configuration, or general application data.

    Summary

    Baseband data packets support two physical connection types:

    • SCO link– synchronous, low-latency, real-time communication
    • ACL link– asynchronous, high-throughput, best-effort data transfer

    These two link types form the foundation of Bluetooth’s physical transport for audio, control, and data communication.

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