It's fitting that such an ugly word as "dongle" is used to describe little plastic eyesores protruding from USB ports like tumors. Especially on laptops, the usual long-and-skinny form factor practically begs to be knocked around, probably breaking the dongle or the USB port, or both. The design at right is a recently announced impressively small design - but it's still that same form factor that asks for trouble. This is what happens when design focuses on a criterion (size) which doesn't exactly match usability (not getting knocked off).
The design on the left, the MoGo Dapter, touts a form that won't snag or get banged - not by making it smaller (though it does happen to be quite small), but by shaping its volume cleverly. Just looking at it, you can imagine sliding a laptop into a case with this thing still attached, and not even worrying about it. Not worrying: now that's convenience!
To be honest, though, a USB Bluetooth dongle is an undesirable solution anyway! A built-in totally-internal transceiver is the way to go - or failing that (since too many computer makers deemphasize the usefulness of Bluetooth, or don't even offer it), a transceiver in a standard slot, like ExpressCard, that can be used with no protrusion. Or to get really crazy, how about laptop designers including a "recessed" USB port on a laptop, allowing dongles, flash drives, and other USB sticks to work without protruding? Another design bandaid, yes - but when there's a real design problem, a bandaid is better than nothing...
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