Wireless Networking Assignment
Wireless Networking Assignment
(Introduction to Wireless)
Semester: October 2017
Subject Code: EBW 202
Subject Name: Wireless Networking
Worth: 10%
Due Date: 27th October 2017
Lecturer: Jasmin Salwa bt Hamdan
Student
Name:
Student Number:
IC/Passport Number:
Class Code:
I hereby declare that this assignment is my own original work, and that no part of
this assignment has been copied from any other source or person except where
due acknowledgement is made. Copying without acknowledgement is plagiarism
and will be dealt with severely by the university college.
Signature:
For this assignment, you must prepare a survey of particular topic in the area of wireless networking. A
list of possible topics is given below. For each topic we have identified a set of initial papers that can be
used to explore the topic. This project will be done in teams of 2 students.
What is a survey?
The goal of a survey is to give a broad, structured overview of a specific area. Here are two scenarios in
which you may have to prepare a survey after you graduate:
You are working for a company that is exploring a new wireless technology or market, so
employees and management are very not very familiar with this new area. You could be asked to
prepare a 30 minute presentation to introduce to area, highlighting different approaches,
challenges, opportunities, and risks.
You decided to go to graduate school and you are writing your first paper on a research project
you just finished. You need to write a short related work section that includes a survey of existing
work in the areas relevant to your research.
A survey is different from a set of paper summaries. The survey should focus on presenting the big
picture using the papers as examples. For each topic, we have identified about three papers to get you
started, but we generally expect that you will have to consult additional materials. Examples may be
papers cited in the original papers, material found on the web, or results from online libraries, like IEEE
Explorer, or the ACM portal.
Besides giving you experience in preparing a survey, this assignment should also help you sharpen your
critical thinking skills. You should not blindly accept all statements you read (including in the papers cited
below) simply because they appear in print in a refereed publication. While the material will generally be
technically correct, parts of the papers may be biased or may ignore relevant related work (typically by
accident), or the claims may overstate the results that are presented. These problems most often show
up in the evaluation section of the papers. The evaluation is sometimes flawed (e.g. uses inaccurate
simulators, ignores certain sources of overhead, or presents graphs in misleading ways) or may be very
limited in scope (e.g. collects results on one testbed that may not be typical, but then makes very broad
claims). Your assessment of the accuracy of the results should be reflected in the survey, i.e. the survey
must present your perspective on the state of the art in the area.
You can consult pretty much any material as long as you cite the source. However, you cannot copy text
from other papers or the web, since that is plagiarism. The only exception is that you can quote short
excerpts or figures from other material, assuming you make it clear that it is a quote and you cite the
source.
Deliverables
You specifically have two deliverables for this assignment:
You should prepare a 20 minute presentation. We will allocate 30 minute slots after the mid-term
break, leaving time for questions after each presentation.
You should present a written version of your survey. The length should be limited to 800 words
(about 2 pages), not including references.
The first step is to form teams and propose a set of topics. Each team should propose three rank-ordered
topics. The instructors will then assign topics to teams, considering the relevance of topics, their breadth
and diversity. One of the three topics you list can be self defined, i.e. you can pick a topic that is not on
the list. For self-defined topics, you must provide the initial set of papers that you propose to use as the
starting point for the core.
Topics
We list the topics we have identified with an initial set of papers for each topic.
1. Mesh networking
Trading Structure for Randomness in Wireless Opportunistic Routing, ACM Sigcomm 2007
ExOR: Opportunistic Multi-Hop Routing for Wireless Networks, ACM Sigcomm 2005
Simple Opportunistic Routing Protocol for Wireless Mesh Networks, IEEE WiMesh 2006
2. Network coding
ZigZag Decoding: Combating Hidden Terminals in Wireless Networks, ACM Sigcomm 2008
Symbol-level Network Coding for Wireless Mesh Networks, ACM Sigcomm 2008
Beyond the Bits: Cooperative Packet Recovery Using PHY Information, Mobicom 2007
6. Narrowband/wideband/channel width
A Case for Adapting Channel Width in Wireless Networks, ACM Sigcomm 2008
Learning to Share: Narrowband-Friendly Wideband Wireless Networks, ACM Sigcomm 2008