Researchers discovered what they're describing as a potential security issue that could affect a billion devices.
An undocumented command has been discovered in Espressif's ESP32 chips that could be exploited to the detriment of millions ...
First-of-its-kind solution eliminates costly custom gateway development, enabling seamless cloud management for Bluetooth ...
"Tarlogic Security has detected a backdoor in the ESP32, a microcontroller that enables WiFi and Bluetooth connection and is present in millions of mass-market IoT devices," reads a Tarlogic ...
Google has rolled out the third beta for Android 16. The beta introduces new features, including support for Auracast.
Researchers have found undocumented commands in a popular bluetooth chip which is inside over a billion devices worldwide. The secret commands are in the ESP32 chip, which is made by Espressif.
This includes devices marked to support Bluetooth LE. If you want to use LE Audio, you need to make sure that you are running Windows 11 version 22H2 or later, your device should support Bluetooth ...
ESPC32 Bluetooth chip, which has been sold in the billions, allegedly allowed remote access and backdoor deployment.
Yesterday, we wrote about the world's smallest microcontroller (TI MSPM0C1104), which measures just 1.38mm2 in its smallest ...
Google overhauled its Find My Device network last year, making it easy to track lost Android phones, Wear OS watches, compatible earbuds, or other possessions using a Bluetooth tracker.
Luckily, Bluetooth is backward compatible, which means any Bluetooth adapter will be able to sync with whatever devices you're looking to use, you'll just lose out on some of the newer-generation ...