Asked by pp

What is the difference between Wi-Fi and Bluetooth?
Both share data, but only Wi-Fi does this using radio frequencies.
Both connect devices, but only Wi-Fi is meant for encrypted data.
Both use radio frequencies, but Bluetooth uses low-power radio frequency.
Both work with computers, but only Bluetooth can be used in a headset.

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
The correct choice is the third one:

- Both use radio frequencies, but Bluetooth uses low-power radio frequency.

Brief explanation: Both Wi‑Fi and Bluetooth operate on radio waves (commonly the 2.4 GHz ISM band), but they’re optimized for different things. Bluetooth is designed for short-range, low-power, lower-data-rate connections (ideal for headsets, mice, sensors, BLE devices). Wi‑Fi uses more power, supports longer range and much higher data rates, and is intended for networking and internet access (and can also use 5 GHz / 6 GHz bands). Both support encryption, but they use different protocols and topologies (Bluetooth pairing/profiles vs Wi‑Fi SSIDs/APs).