While searching for info on Bluetooth, I came across this little nugget of info from University of Utah. I had no idea that...
Bluetooth® is named for Tenth Century Danish king Harald Blåtand, known in English as Harold Bluetooth Gromson, who is reputed to have been so fond of blueberries that his teeth were stained blue. The Bluetooth symbol is a bindrune that combines the runes for Harald Blåtand's initials -- "h" looks like an asterisk.
I have no doubt that eating a large amount of blueberries regularly would stain the teeth blue. However, I'm not exactly sure how that relates to cutting-edge wireless technology.
Regardless, one of the reasons I was doing a little Harald Blåtand research (I'm going to refer to the technology by its original Danish name) was trying to find out if the Apple Wireless Keyboard and Mouse work with two Macs. Meaning, if I have my laptop and tower in the same room, can I control both with the same Bluetoo-- excuse me, Harald Blåtand keyboard and mouse.
One issue I could imagine would be that typing and controlling the mouse would happen simultaneously on both computers. That could be a problem -- but perhaps there's a way for it to work. I've had a tough time finding an answer online, so if anyone has already experimented with this, be sure to leave a comment.