Europe – EU Declaration of Conformity

This device complies with the essential requirements of the R&TTE Directive 1999/5/EC. The following test methods have been applied in order to prove presumption of compliance with the R&TTE Directive 1999/5/EC:

• EN 60950: 2000

Safety of Information Technology Equipment

• EN 300 328-2 V1.4.1 (2003-04)

Technical requirements for spread-spectrum radio equipment

• EN 301 489-1/-17 V1.4.1/1.2.1 (2002-08)

EMC requirements for spread-spectrum radio equipment.

This device is a 2.4 GHz wireless LAN transceiver, intended for indoor home and office use in all EU and EFTA member states.

Bluetooth™ Networking Overview

In order to exchange data, two Bluetooth enabled devices must establish a connection. Bluetooth software is always running in the background, ready to respond to connection re- quests. One device (known as the master or the client) must request a connection with another. The second device (the slave or the server) then accepts or rejects the connection. A Bluetooth enabled QL series printer will normally act as a slave, but in theory any Bluetooth device can be either a master or a slave. This miniature network is sometimes referred to as a “piconet” and can consist of several Bluetooth enabled devices.

For the most part, communications using the Bluetooth protocol are initiated and processed without any operator inter- vention, much like the IrDA system described previously.

Each Bluetooth enabled QL series printer has a unique Blue- tooth Device Address (BDA) loaded into its QuickLink module when manufactured.

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QL Series User Guide