
Rune: How Pairing becomes Prevalent
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Not the science fiction epic, that's "Dune".
In this episode, I consider the reasons Bluetooth became ubiquitous, even though it wasn’t supposed to be a global standard. It was one of many close range options. It was also clunky, battery-hungry, and forgot your name. Yet, it did something most technologies never achieve: it stayed, and became woven into expectation. It's Bluetooth, a symbolic icon from a Dutch-inspired bind-rune and a quiet connective tissue between billions of devices.
The episode investigates how bluetooth embedded itself not through technical "superiority", but through the power of network ties and the persistence of showing up.
Along the way, we unpack:
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Why infrared (IR) quietly disappeared and where it is today.
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How Zigbee built a smart home, and stayed there.
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What network theory tells us about trust and ubiquity
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What gets embedded and what sticks?
This is a story about protocols rather than products, and the devices we stopped noticing, because when something is allowed to work well, we don't need to.