I am very new to Bluetooth programming, and thus I apologize if this question seems naive.
That said, a potential client of mine has a custom hardware device that transmits data via Bluetooth to a Windows PC. The PC software connects to the device by opening a virtual COM port, and reading data from it; it then visualizes this data in real time.
What they'd like to do is connect three of these devices (or rather, three very similar devices that are hooked up to different sensors) to the PC at the same time. They want to rewrite the software to aggregate data from all three sources, and to visualize all of it in real time; this means that the delay between each device producing the data, and the data appearing of the screen, can be on the order of tens of milliseconds, at worst.
My question is twofold.
1). Can this be done at all ? Is there a way for software on a PC to connect to three Bluetooth-backed virtual COM ports at the same time ? (I'm guessing that the answer is "yes", but it pays to be sure).
2). What is the best platform for doing this ? The original software is written in C++/MFC, but I personally would prefer something more modern, with access to easier graphics and GUI APIs.