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Tuesday, May 19, 2026

DIDJA KNOW? / HOW DOES BLUETOOTH WORK?

WHAT'S HARALD HAVE TO DO WITH ALL THIS?

 The name “Bluetooth” itself comes from a 10th-century Danish king, Harald Bluetooth, who united rival tribes. The inventors thought it was a fitting metaphor for a technology that “unites” devices from different manufacturers. 

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Bluetooth is essentially a tiny two-way radio system designed for short-range communication between devices. Your phone, headphones, keyboard, car stereo, and smartwatch all contain miniature radio transmitters and receivers that talk to one another over a specific slice of the radio spectrum. 

 Bluetooth operates in the 2.4 GHz ISM band, the same general neighborhood used by Wi-Fi, cordless phones, and even microwave ovens. Instead of staying on one frequency, Bluetooth rapidly “hops” between many frequencies thousands of times per second. 

This technique, called frequency hopping spread spectrum, helps reduce interference and makes the connection more reliable. 

 At the simplest level, the process works like this: 

 Discovery: 

A Bluetooth device announces its presence by broadcasting tiny packets of information: “I’m here. I’m a speaker,” or “I’m a keyboard.” Your phone or computer scans for nearby broadcasts and displays available devices. 

 Pairing: 

When you select a device, the two devices establish trust. Older systems used PIN codes like “0000” or “1234.” Modern Bluetooth usually performs encrypted key exchanges automatically. The devices create shared security keys so they can recognize one another later without repeating setup. 

 Connection:

 Once paired, the devices form a short-range radio link. One device usually acts as the “central” controller, while the other behaves as a peripheral or accessory. 

Data Transfer:

 The devices exchange digital information encoded into radio signals: 

• Music to headphones 

• Keystrokes from a keyboard 

• GPS data to a car dashboard 

• Health statistics from a smartwatch Bluetooth converts the information into binary data, transmits it by radio, and reconstructs it on the receiving end. Bluetooth is intentionally low power. Unlike Wi-Fi, which aims for speed and range, Bluetooth was designed for efficiency and convenience. That’s why earbuds can run for hours on tiny batteries. There are actually several flavors of Bluetooth: 

 • Classic Bluetooth Used for audio streaming, speakers, car systems, keyboards, etc. 

 • Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) Designed for tiny devices needing long battery life, such as fitness trackers, medical sensors, AirTags, and smart-home gadgets. 

 Typical range: 

• Older Bluetooth: about 30 feet • Modern versions: often 100 feet or more in open air Modern Bluetooth versions also support: 

• Stereo audio 

• Device tracking 

• Mesh networking for smart homes 

• Simultaneous multiple connections 

• Better encryption and lower latency 


Monday, May 18, 2026

MEDIA MONDAY / THE BEST 75 SECONDS IN TV HISTORY EVERY WEEK

THE CLASSIC SIGH BEHIND PBS' MYSTERY!: THE DAMSEL IN DISTRESS 

By Thomas Shess, founder of PillartoPost.org daily online magazine style blog--Even the harshest critics of this blog effuse PillartoPost.org is absolutely right to single it out the opening genius behind PBS Mystery! TV series. That opening sequence is one of the most indelible pieces of television design ever produced—part Victorian fever dream, part dark nursery rhyme. 

Let’s give it its due. 

The illustrator: Edward Gorey 

The entire visual language comes from Gorey—an American illustrator whose pen-and-ink drawings fused Edwardian elegance with quiet menace. His work already had a cult following, but the Mystery! intro in 1980 pushed him into wider cultural consciousness. His style is unmistakable: thin, scratchy lines, stiff figures, and scenes that feel both formal and vaguely sinister. That’s exactly what you’re seeing in the opening—the croquet in the rain, the funeral umbrellas, the anxious figures, the “moaning maiden.” 

How it came to be 

The sequence wasn’t just a quick sketch. Gorey originally storyboarded something much longer—reportedly around ten minutes. PBS wanted a tight, roughly 75-second opener, so the project shifted. 

 The final product became a collaboration: 

• Animation by Derek Lamb and colleagues (including Eugene Federenko and Janet Perlman) 

 • Music by Normand Roger, whose score gives the sequence its eerie, almost playful unease 

What you’re watching is not a narrative but a tableau sequence—a series of disconnected, suggestive moments. That was deliberate. It invites you to feel mystery rather than understand it. 

 The “moaning maiden”—who voiced it? Here’s where things get a little unsatisfying, even for a journalist’s instinct. The famous sigh or moan you remember—the woman slumped, hand to forehead—is not credited to any named actress in official records. There’s no widely documented performer attached to that sound. In all available production notes and retrospectives, the sequence’s sound design is attributed broadly to the musical score and effects, not to a featured voice performance. In other words: 

• It sounds human, theatrical, almost operatic 

 • But it functions as part of the sound design, not a credited role That ambiguity actually fits Gorey perfectly. His work thrives on suggestion, not attribution. Why it worked so powerfully.

 The genius of the sequence lies in three things: 

1. It promised a world, not a plot You weren’t told a story—you were dropped into a mood. Viewers often remember the intro more vividly than the episode that followed. 

2. It fused high art with television This wasn’t typical TV graphics. It was gallery-grade illustration turned into motion. 

3. It unsettled without explaining why Children found it eerie. Adults found it witty. That duality is rare. 

 Is it the best TV intro ever? 

“Best” is always subjective—but in terms of lasting cultural imprint, it’s in elite company. If you line it up against other greats: 

• The Twilight Zone (iconic narration + concept) 

 • The Sopranos (character-driven realism) 

 • Game of Thrones (world-building spectacle) …

Mystery! stands apart because it’s pure atmosphere and illustration, not narrative or branding. It’s arguably the most literary TV intro ever made. A final note, in your register The sequence does something television almost never dares anymore: it trusts the viewer to sit with unease. 

No explanation, no payoff—just a suggestion that something is wrong, somewhere behind the hedges. 

Ohh!

And that faint, human sigh drifting through it all… Whether credited or not, it did its job. We will remember it.

MORE GOREY: