• @BorgDrone
    link
    31 month ago

    I’m a Mac guy so I’m a bit out of touch with the state of PCs. I know PCs usually are a few years behind technology wise, but I’m kind of surprised they still don’t have bluetooth as standard. The technology is decades old.

    • @stoy@lemmy.zip
      link
      fedilink
      171 month ago

      I know PCs usually are a few years behind technology wise.

      I am an IT technician, and it takes a lot of confidence and ignorance to be this wrong.

      I’m kind of surprised they still don’t have bluetooth as standard.

      This explains so much about your earlier statement, you seem to think that there is a a standard PC, there isn’t.

      There are hundreds of manufacturers making PCs and PC parts.

      I have never seen a laptop in decades that lack Bluetooth, however there are still desktop motherboards you can buy without wifi or bluetooth, but this is not my reason for making this post…

      I am pissed because I don’t get why you wouldn’t just put the required Bluetooth into the PSVR2 PC adapter unit.

    • @Tropper@lemm.ee
      link
      fedilink
      English
      21 month ago

      That usually depends on if the PC has an inbuilt Wi-Fi chip. The Bluetooth controller is usually coupled in the same chip. So PCs that lack Wi-Fi usually doesn’t have Bluetooth.

    • Skull giver
      link
      fedilink
      11 month ago

      Most motherboards I’ve seen come in two versions: one with WiFi and Bluetooth, and one that doesn’t have wireless but is a few dollars cheaper.

      I don’t think it makes sense to cheap out on the motherboard only to spend twice the difference on a USB adapter. I only have a dongle because Bluetooth motherboards weren’t quite so ubiquitous when I bought my current machine.

      For prebuilts, the cheapest office PCs seem to come with Bluetooth now. Maybe there’s some kind of ultra barebones office PC stock out there, but I think you need to go out of your way to get those.

      What I think matters is how terrible the consumer GPU market has become in the past five years. Decent GPU tiers doubles or tripled in price. Many gamers are probably rocking older hardware than they would’ve if it weren’t for cryptocurrency and AI eating up the consumer GPU market.