C01 Introduction
C01 Introduction
Thanks to:
Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen Schiller
http://www.jochenschiller.de/
for providing these slides
1.1
Overview of the lecture
Introduction Broadcast Systems
Use-cases, applications DAB, DVB
Definition of terms
Wireless LANs
Challenges, history
Basic Technology
Wireless Transmission
IEEE 802.11a/b/g, .15, Bluetooth
frequencies & regulations
signals, antennas, signal Network Protocols
propagation Mobile IP
multiplexing, modulation, spread Ad-hoc networking
spectrum, cellular system Routing
Media Access
Transport Protocols
motivation, SDMA, FDMA, TDMA
(fixed, Aloha, CSMA, DAMA, PRMA, Reliable transmission
MACA, collision avoidance, polling), Flow control
CDMA Quality of Service
Wireless Telecommunication Support for Mobility
Systems
File systems, WWW, WAP, i-mode,
GSM, HSCSD, GPRS, DECT,
TETRA, UMTS, IMT-2000 J2ME, ...
Satellite Systems Outlook
GEO, LEO, MEO, routing, handover
1.2
Chapter 1:
Introduction
1.3
Computers for the next decades?
Advances in technology
more computing power in smaller devices
flat, lightweight displays with low power consumption
new user interfaces due to small dimensions
more bandwidth per cubic meter
multiple wireless interfaces: wireless LANs, wireless WANs, regional
wireless telecommunication networks etc. („overlay networks“)
1.4
Mobile communication
1.5
Applications I
Vehicles
transmission of news, road condition, weather, music via DAB
personal communication using GSM
position via GPS
local ad-hoc network with vehicles close-by to prevent accidents, guidance
system, redundancy
vehicle data (e.g., from busses, high-speed trains) can be transmitted in
advance for maintenance
Emergencies
early transmission of patient data to the hospital, current status, first
diagnosis
replacement of a fixed infrastructure in case of earthquakes, hurricanes,
fire etc.
crisis, war, ...
1.6
Typical application: road traffic
UMTS, WLAN,
DAB, DVB, GSM,
cdma2000, TETRA, ...
1.7
Mobile and wireless services – Always Best Connected
UMTS
2 Mbit/s
1.8
Applications II
Travelling salesmen
direct access to customer files stored in a central location
consistent databases for all agents
mobile office
Replacement of fixed networks
remote sensors, e.g., weather, earth activities
flexibility for trade shows
LANs in historic buildings
Entertainment, education, ...
outdoor Internet access
intelligent travel guide with up-to-date
location dependent information
ad-hoc networks for
multi user games
1.9
Location dependent services
1.10
Mobile devices
Sensors,
embedded
controllers
performance
1.11
Effects of device portability
Power consumption
limited computing power, low quality displays, small disks due to
limited battery capacity
CPU: power consumption ~ CV2f
C: internal capacity, reduced by integration
V: supply voltage, can be reduced to a certain limit
f: clock frequency, can be reduced temporally
Loss of data
higher probability, has to be included in advance into the design
(e.g., defects, theft)
Limited user interfaces
compromise between size of fingers and portability
integration of character/voice recognition, abstract symbols
Limited memory
limited value of mass memories with moving parts
flash-memory or ? as alternative
1.12
Wireless networks in comparison to fixed networks
1.13
Early history of wireless communication
1.14
History of wireless communication I
1.15
History of wireless communication II
1.16
History of wireless communication III
1.17
History of wireless communication IV
1.18
History of wireless communication V
1.19
Wireless systems: overview of the development
cordless wireless LAN
cellular phones satellites
phones
1980:
1981: CT0
NMT 450 1982:
1983: Inmarsat-A
AMPS 1984:
CT1
1986:
NMT 900 1987:
1988: CT1+
Inmarsat-C
1989:
CT 2
1991: 1991: 1991:
1992: CDMA D-AMPS 1992: DECT 199x:
GSM Inmarsat-B proprietary
1993:
Inmarsat-M
PDC
1994: 1997:
DCS 1800 IEEE 802.11
1998:
Iridium 1999:
802.11b, Bluetooth
2000: 2000:
analogue GPRS IEEE 802.11a
2001:
IMT-2000
digital
200?:
Fourth Generation
(Internet based)
4G – fourth generation: when and how?
1.20
Foundation: ITU-R - Recommendations for IMT-2000
M.687-2
M.1078
IMT-2000 concepts and goals
security in IMT-2000
M.816-1
M.1079
framework for services
speech/voiceband data performance
M.817 M.1167
IMT-2000 network architectures framework for satellites
M.818-1 M.1168
satellites in IMT-2000 framework for management
M.819-2 M.1223
IMT-2000 for developing countries evaluation of security mechanisms
M.1034-1 M.1224
requirements for the radio vocabulary for IMT-2000
interface(s)
M.1225
M.1035 evaluation of transmission technologies
framework for radio interface(s) and ...
radio sub-system functions
M.1036 http://www.itu.int/imt
spectrum considerations
1.21
Worldwide wireless subscribers (old prediction 1998)
700
600
500
Americas
400 Europe
Japan
300 others
total
200
100
0
1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001
1.22
Mobile phones per 100 people 1999
Germany
Greece
Spain
Belgium
France
Netherlands
Great Britain
Switzerland
Ireland
Austria
Portugal
Luxemburg
Italy
Denmark
Norway
Sweden
Finland
0 10 20 30 40 50 60
2005: 70-90% penetration in Western Europe
1.23
Worldwide cellular subscriber growth
1200
1000
Subscribers [million]
800
600
400
200
0
1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002
Note that the curve starts to flatten in 2000 – 2004: 1.5 billion users
1.24
Cellular subscribers per region (June 2002)
Middle East;
1,6
Africa; 3,1
Americas (incl.
USA/Canada); Asia Pacific;
22 36,9
Europe; 36,4
1.25
Mobile statistics snapshot (09/2002 / 12/2004)
Total Global Mobile Users #1 Mobile Country China (139M / 300m)
869M / 1.52bn #1 GSM Country China (99m)
Total Analogue Users 71M / 34m #1 SMS Country Philipines
Total US Mobile users 145M / 140m #1 Handset Vendor 2Q02 Nokia (37.2%)
Total Global GSM users 680M / 1.25T #1 Network In Africa Vodacom (6.6m)
Total Global CDMA Users 127M / 202m #1 Network In Asia Unicom (153m)
Total TDMA users 84M / 120m #1 Network In Japan DoCoMo
Total European users 283M / 343m #1 Network In Europe T-Mobile (22m / 28m)
Total African users 18.5M / 53m #1 In Infrastructure Ericsson
Total 3G users 130M / 130m(?) SMS Sent Globally 1Q02 60T / 135bn
Total South African users 13.2m / 19m SMS sent in UK 6/02 1.3T / 2.1bn
European Prepaid Penetration 63% SMS sent Germany 1Q02 5.7T
European Mobile Penetration 70.2% GSM Countries on Air 171 / 210
Global Phone Shipments 2001 393m GSM Association members 574 / 839
Global Phone Sales 2Q02 96.7m Total Cost of 3G Licenses in Europe 110T€
SMS/month/user 36
http://www.cellular.co.za/stats/stats-
main.htm
The figures vary a lot depending on the statistic, creator of the statistic etc.!
1.26
Areas of research in mobile communication
Wireless Communication
transmission quality (bandwidth, error rate, delay)
modulation, coding, interference
media access, regulations
...
Mobility
location dependent services
location transparency
quality of service support (delay, jitter, security)
...
Portability
power consumption
limited computing power, sizes of display, ...
usability
...
1.27
Key features of future mobile and wireless networks
1.28
Potential problems
Quality of service
Today‘s Internet is best-effort
Integrated services did not work out
Differentiated service have to prove scalability and manageability
What about the simplicity of the Internet? DoS attacks on QoS?
Internet protocols are well known…
…also to attackers, hackers, intruders
security by obscurity does not really work, however, closed systems provide some
protection
Reliability, maintenance
Open question if Internet technology is really cheaper as soon as high reliability
(99.9999%) is required plus all features are integrated
Missing charging models
Charging by technical parameters (volume, time) is not reasonable
Pay-per-application may make much more sense
Killer application? There is no single killer application!
Choice of services and seamless access to networks determine the success
1.29
Simple reference model used here
Application Application
Transport Transport
Radio Medium
1.30
Influence of mobile communication to the layer model
service location
Application layer new applications, multimedia
adaptive applications
Transport layer congestion and flow control
quality of service
addressing, routing,
Network layer device location
hand-over
authentication
Data link layer
media access
multiplexing
media access control
Physical layer encryption
modulation
interference
attenuation
frequency
1.31
Overview of the main chapters
Chapter 10:
Support for Mobility
Chapter 9:
Mobile Transport Layer
Chapter 8:
Mobile Network Layer
Chapter 3:
Medium Access Control
Chapter 2:
Wireless Transmission
1.32
Overlay Networks - the global goal
regional
vertical
handover
metropolitan area
campus-based horizontal
handover
in-house
1.33