The Nexus One’s Bluetooth-enabled dock spied at the FCC

The Federal Communications Commission has just published a tasty little bit of selective information regarding the much hyped Google Phone, which we know as the “Nexus One.” According to Federal Communications Commission documents, the Nexus One works with some sort of Bluetooth-enabled cradle/dock. The dock apparently supports Bluetooth EDR for radio data transfers at speeds up to 3Mbps. It’s not clear if the bobtail volition come included with the Nexus One, or if it volition be offered as an optional appurtenance.

As far as what the Nexus One’s bobtail does exactly, we have no estimate. Since the handset itself already sports Bluetooth, it’s probable that the Bluetooth radio in the dock will be used to control a home theatre system. In fact, a “connection diagram of trial system” shows the bobtail connected to a videodisk actor and a speaker, which makes a strong lawsuit for the Bluetooth bobtail organism a multimedia portal of some sort.

We’ll rich person to waiting for more launch inside information from Google (NSDQ: GOOG) before we know for sure what this bobtail actually does. But, if speculation about an early January launching from T-Mobile River and Google pans out, we won’t rich person to wait long before the Nexus One’s massive 3.7-inch capacitive touchscreen, 5-megapixel photographic camera, 1Ghz processor, Global Positioning System, wireless local area network and Android 2.1 operating organization – all courtesy of smartphone maker HTC – get functionary.

[Via: AndroidForums]

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