Best Practices 3g 4g App Development PDF
Best Practices 3g 4g App Development PDF
Best Practices 3g 4g App Development PDF
Whitepaper
Revision 1.0
Revision Date 7/31/2012
© 2012 AT&T Intellectual Property Best Practices for 3G and 4G App Development
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© 2012 AT&T Intellectual Property Best Practices for 3G and 4G App Development
Table of Contents
1. Overview .................................................................................................. 1
2. Scope ....................................................................................................... 2
3. Evolution of LTE ..................................................................................... 2
4. Benefits .................................................................................................... 3
a. Higher bandwidth ......................................................................... 3
b. Lower latency ............................................................................... 4
c. Improved security......................................................................... 4
d. Prioritized QoS ............................................................................. 4
5. LTE Enhanced Applications .................................................................. 5
6. Challenges ............................................................................................... 6
a. Channel quality ............................................................................ 6
b. Perceived network speed............................................................. 7
c. Limited battery life ........................................................................ 7
d. Handover...................................................................................... 8
e. Signaling traffic ............................................................................ 8
f. Third-party components ............................................................... 9
g. Device reachability ....................................................................... 9
h. CSFB (Circuit Switched Fallback) speed impact ......................... 9
i. IPv6 support ............................................................................... 10
7. Best practices ....................................................................................... 10
a) Data cap.............................................................................................. 10
i) Avoid large thumbnails............................................................ 11
ii) Provide configurable data transfer settings............................ 11
iii) Use Wi-Fi as much as possible ............................................. 12
b) Battery Life .......................................................................................... 12
i) Avoid constant polling ............................................................. 13
ii) Download in bursts rather than continuously streaming ........ 13
iii) Minimize aggressive behavior ............................................... 13
c) Speed .................................................................................................. 14
i) Decouple user transitions from data interactions .................. 14
© 2012 AT&T Intellectual Property Best Practices for 3G and 4G App Development
1. Overview
4
G LTE (Long Term Evolution) is the latest, fastest and most secure version of four
generations of mobile technologies: 1G, 2G, 3G and 4G. Prior to LTE, voice and
data were carried over two channels: A circuit switched channel for voice and an
IP-based packet core network for data. LTE is designed to provide a single,
simplified, all-IP channel to carry both voice and data. LTE is being deployed worldwide
to meet demands from the exponential growth of mobile data traffic and is one of the
three largest drivers of mobile data consumption 1:
• Faster networks: LTE, with higher speeds and significantly lower latencies,
enables the innovation of mobile apps with richer services, for example, video
sharing in high-definition on the uplink for video conferencing or playing latency-
sensitive games.
• Powerful devices: Computing power is bringing desktop quality computing to
mobile devices (smartphones and tablets). Declining price-points for increasingly
more powerful devices are resulting in the increased usage of Internet enabled
mobile devices. For example, over 56% of AT&T’s customers are already using
smartphones 2.
• Mobile apps: Apps are considered the major driver of mobile data consumption.
Video apps alone (e.g., Hulu, Netflix) consume 66% of all mobile data traffic 3.
Apps on powerful, faster mobile networks and mobile devices bring
opportunities to developers that understand both the device platforms and the
mobile networks (2G, 3G and 4G) in which they operate. Developers will be able
to build more efficient and powerful mobile apps when they understand how
networks function. This efficiency in turn makes networks more valuable so
customer adoption of apps accelerates.
This white paper emphasizes LTE technical considerations rather than legal or business
development issues. It covers the following main areas to help developers build LTE
efficient apps:
1. Evolution: A history of the evolution of mobile networks from 1G to 4G.
2. Benefits: The benefits of developing apps for LTE.
3. Apps: Examples of LTE specific apps.
4. Challenges: The LTE rollout is a gradual deployment to U.S. cities which
introduces issues that developers must consider while the LTE deployment is
ongoing.
5. Best practices: Core principles for developers that directly impact their users.
© 2012 AT&T Intellectual Property Best Practices for 3G and 4G App Development
2. Scope
The focus of this whitepaper is to address the best practices for the four key areas of
application performance that customers perceive the most:
Data cap: A significantly faster network hasn’t translated (yet) into larger
monthly data caps. Users are still dealing with 3 – 5 GB data caps.
Battery-life: LTE handsets result in a heavier drain on battery life than earlier
generations. This heavier drain represents the biggest area of concern for
customers.
Speed: Bandwidth and latency are the two metrics that users mean when they
say an app is “fast” or “slow.”
Robustness: Apps must be robust in handling handover to slower 3G networks.
Unlike other carriers, AT&T’s LTE/HSPA+ combination will have a less jarring
speed drop than other carriers that downshift between an LTE/3G combination.
3. Evolution of LTE
The following chart shows the evolution of the capabilities of mobile networks from 1G
to 4G LTE.
1G 2G 2.5G 3G 4G HSPA+ 4G LTE
Year(s) 1980s 1990s 2001 2008 2010 2011
Voice calls
Digital
SMS
Internet access
Circuit Switched Data
IP-Based Packet Core
Industry Max Speed (Kbps) - 9.6 40 – 50 3,800 6,000 61,000
Icon displayed None None G or E 3G 4G or H+ 4G LTE
1G: In the 1980s, a 1G cellular network handled only voice calls (no data) in analog
waves at 9.6 Kbps. It had several limitations such as poor voice quality and a lack of
privacy (third parties could eavesdrop on calls on analog networks) due to the absence
of encryption.
2G: In the 1990s, second generation (2G) mobile phones and networks were introduced.
Due to modulation (voice converted to digital signals in the phone and then analog for
transmission), handsets overcame some 1G limitations such as a lack of privacy by
adding encryption. Unlike 1G phones which only supported voice calls, 2G also
© 2012 AT&T Intellectual Property Best Practices for 3G and 4G App Development
supported data services such as SMS and WAP (Wireless Access Protocol – a lightweight
protocol for transferring data on handsets). Both voice & data were transmitted using a
single channel, CSD (Circuit Switched Data) technology.
2.5G: This was the interim technology to 3G. 2.5G was launched in two major flavors:
GPRS and EDGE. The letter “G” would be displayed on a handset’s screen next to the
bars if it was on GPRS (General Packet Radio Service) and “E” if it was on the faster EDGE
(Enhanced Data for GSM Evolution). EDGE is approximately 3x faster than GPRS and was
also known as 2.75G. GPRS had download speeds of 30-40 Kbps.
3G: By early 2008, the third generation, 3G, was launched with GSM UMTS (WCDMA,
HSPA, and HSDPA). Phones display “3G” on the screen when using a 3G network. With
3G, voice and data travel on two separate data paths: CSD for voice and a packet core
network for data. As a result, AT&T customers using 3G became the first users
nationwide, to be able to use voice and data simultaneously.
4G: The ITU (International Telecommunications Union) defines 4G as the ability to
achieve a theoretical peak download of 100 Mbps while mobile and 1 Gbps while
stationary. This UN entity also extended the classification to include slower 4G
forerunners which offer significant improvements over 3G such as HSPA+ (High Speed
Packet Access) and its faster successor LTE (Long Term Evolution). 4G LTE was rolled out
by AT&T in September, 2011. Phones typically display “4G” or H+ when on HSPA+ and
“4G LTE” when on LTE.
The next evolution after LTE is LTE Advanced (LTE-A) with theoretical download speeds
of 1 Gbps and 200 Mbps upload speed. However, deployment dates have not been
announced.
4. Benefits
4G LTE brings four key benefits to mobile devices:
a . H ig h e r ba n dw idth
Bandwidth is the rate at which data can be transferred via physical media such
as fiber, copper or in the case of smartphones, via radio waves. Depending on
device and network conditions, LTE is actually 7 to 15x faster 4 than the earlier
generation i.e., 4G HSPA+.
Note that LTE speeds shown in the following chart represent peak data rates
under ideal, lightly loaded network conditions. Actual speeds under real-world
conditions will be less than those at peak rates.
b. L o w e r la te n c y
In LTE, the latency or lapsed time between a request and its response has been
reduced to Wi-Fi levels of less than 50 milliseconds (ms). The combined effect of
higher bandwidth and lower latency enables mobile developers to deliver better
experiences. That includes the use of data intensive technologies such as HD
video streaming, cloud-based speech recognition, augmented reality, and
interactive gaming.
Round-trip Latencies for cellular and wired environments
Wired Ethernet 25
c . I m pr o v e d s e cu r ity
Security improvements in LTE include the use of larger 128 bit network
authentication keys when data is sent on a secure channel. This allows the RAN
(Radio Access Network) to provide more secure communications between
network elements and terminal devices. IPSec is also provided for secure
tunneled IP communication if it is supported by the device.
d. P r io r itiz e d Q o S
LTE Quality of Service (QoS) introduces nine types of traffic with individual
processing priority. This means that latency-sensitive traffic can be prioritized
over latency tolerant traffic. For example, conversational voice and (real-time)
video with a higher QoS will not be delayed by lower QoS traffic such as email
and file-transfers. QoS prioritization also means that voice data can be
prevented from over-consuming bandwidth reserved for video broadcasts.
Quality of Service is defined by the carriers and can be customized at the
subscriber level. Some of the nine types of LTE traffic are conversational voice,
conversational video, streaming video, and real-time games6.
The policy and charging rules function (PCRF) is one of two dedicated network
elements that define, control, and enforce policies in addition to managing QoS
© 2012 AT&T Intellectual Property Best Practices for 3G and 4G App Development
and data hungry and should be tested and optimized with tools such as AT&T’s
Application Resource Optimizer 9 (ARO) to minimize power consumption.
M2M: Mobile networks used to be only for voice communication. But now, the trend is
to the Internet of Things or machine to machine (M2M) communication. Smart meters,
traffic lights, cars, household appliances, and other devices are able to communicate
with each other.
M2M is used in 2G and 3G 10. The benefit that LTE brings to M2M is increased spectral
efficiency. Spectral efficiency in 3G UMTS for example, is 3 bits per second (bps)/Hz. LTE,
however, increases that five-fold to 15 bps/Hz. This increased efficiency becomes critical
when forecasts show that the number of connected devices is forecasted to double to
12 billion by 2020 11. Thus, carriers are able to offload M2M data traffic from congested
3G to LTE.
One example of M2M is AT&T’s Digital Life (digitallifeservices.att.com) that provides a
remote monitoring and automation platform for connecting a user’s device to devices in
their home. This platform makes it possible to create apps for web-based home
automation, security, energy management, and healthcare services.
6. Challenges
Network changes don't happen overnight. It has taken almost ten years for each
wireless network generation to evolve and be deployed. The deployment of LTE
networks is well under way, but it is expected to coexist with 3G and even 2G networks
for years to come.
With all the claims around LTE and its blazing speed, it is important to understand that
there are many factors that may affect the perceived speed. Such factors include tower
proximity, packet fragmentation, concurrency, and signal blocking. The best practices
section in this white paper addresses how developers can leverage LTE best practices to
manage these challenges, and it introduces a software tool to help developers visualize
issues and evaluate how compliant their app is with these best practices.
a . C h a n n e l q u a lity
b. P e r c e iv e d n e tw o r k s pe e d
The following factors will impact the actual speeds an end user will experience:
• Distance from cell towers.
• Network congestion. As a shared medium, cellular networks typically slow
down as they are loaded with users connected at the same time.
• RF interference caused by weather, terrain, buildings, and walls.
• Device specs such as OS type and processors.
• Application design.
c . L im ite d ba tte r y lif e
Batteries may have improved in capacity, but have not kept pace
with power demands. LTE phones consume 5% - 20% more than
prior generation phones, depending on the apps used 12. Handset
radios are the single biggest source of power drain in any device
apart from the touch screen. Unlike the display, the radio is always
on and is draining the battery. Apps also drain devices by not managing network
connections. And with LTE devices, the radio is doing a lot more than in previous
generations of devices. For example:
• Multiple rabbit ears: All LTE devices use MIMO (Multiple Inputs, Multiple
Outputs), which essentially means a handset no longer uses a single antenna
to send or receive signals. Rather, it uses two parallel transmissions. Each
antenna requires its own power amplifier for transmission. So, at a basic
level, two parallel transmissions is (almost) analogous to running two phones
off a single battery. To compound the challenge, future devices will use even
more than two antennas.
• Scanning further: LTE deployment is still underway, and even within an LTE
market, cell towers may not be densely located. With cells spaced much
further apart, devices have to boost transmission power to reach further.
Since there will also be coverage gaps, smartphones will be dropping in and
out of LTE coverage taxing an already over-taxed battery. So apps, especially
streaming apps, need to be robust enough to run on 3G and 4G HSPA+
networks and conserve battery.
© 2012 AT&T Intellectual Property Best Practices for 3G and 4G App Development
• Packed airwaves: Faster networks essentially mean that more bits are
packed into a radio wave. But as waveform complexity increases, so too does
the power needed to modulate and demodulate the radio wave.
d. H a ndover
Signaling storms caused by applications have brought down LTE networks around
the world. Signaling is the communication overhead that enables user
authentication, authorization, charging, and billing 14. Signaling costs occur when
phones change their state, send data, and move from one area of coverage to
another.
The addition of LTE networks increases the amount of signaling traffic. Unlike 3G’s
three state energy model, LTE has two states - RRC_CONNECTED and RRC_IDLE - as
shown in the following diagram. Details of these LTE states are provided in the
reference section of this white paper 15.
But at a high level, understanding the RRC (Radio Resource Controller) state machine
for LTE will help developers better understand how to maximize the battery life.
Assume for example, an LTE phone has a battery capacity of 5 Wh. An app that is in
the RRC_CONNECTED state consumes 1,000 – 3,500 mW but when it is in the
RRC_IDLE state it consumes less than 15 mW.
T1
Short T3
Long
DRX DRX
T2
RRC_CONNECTED RRC_IDLE
(1,000 – 3,500 mW) (< 15 mW)
© 2012 AT&T Intellectual Property Best Practices for 3G and 4G App Development
Even before LTE was added to the environment of connected devices and 3G
networks, mobile operators faced significant costs in handling signaling, as opposed
to the costs of handling data traffic alone 16.
Applications that disrupt a phone’s radio-state management through poor
networking optimization greatly increase the amount of signaling, irrespective of
data size. In fact, by ignoring the implications of polling and chattiness, apps have
been known to cause signaling storms and even localized network outages.
f. T h ir d- pa r ty c o m po n e n ts
g . D e v ic e r e a c h a bility
Users and developers both expect that devices are, in essence, permanently
connected to the internet, regardless of the physical mechanisms by which this
connection occurs. Platform vendors are addressing the problem of device
reachability through the provision of push notifications: Apple, Google, Microsoft
and RIM all provide some variation of this free service. However, push notifications
have server-side limitations for developers wanting to ensure their apps can be kept
synchronized and always reachable. One example of this limitation is that the push
notifications are strictly one-way: there is no return path for the phone to
acknowledge receipt of the message.
h . C S F B ( C ir cu it S w itc h e d F a llba c k ) s pe e d im pa c t
LTE, being an all-IP network, also has the ability to transmit voice over LTE (VoLTE)
rather than using the 3G circuit switched network. AT&T has not yet deployed
VoLTE, so the default method for voice is currently CSFB. However, VoLTE is the
long-term goal for delivering voice, and it brings some challenges like the following:
Enhanced 911 (E911) U.S. regulations mandate that the physical location for
users dialing 911 be known to the 911 service. While that’s possible for
circuit-switched networks, a physical location can’t be identified in an all IP
network.
LTE coverage is not available in all markets and IMS (IP Multimedia Services)
network elements, a prerequisite for VoLTE, are not fully deployed.
© 2012 AT&T Intellectual Property Best Practices for 3G and 4G App Development
There are longer handover times with VoLTE. The legacy CSD has handover
times of a few milliseconds, while VoLTE takes 2-3 seconds.
For these reasons and others, an LTE handset falls back to 3G circuit-switched voice
and SMS services in two situations: When it is out of LTE coverage, and when a non-
VoLTE voice call is made or received while in LTE coverage. This means that users will
see a drop in data speeds from LTE to HSPA+ during these two scenarios. The same
situation occurs when users are playing a game on LTE and a call is received.
i. I P v 6 s u ppor t
The capacity of IPv4, the Internet’s main addressing protocol with over four billion
addresses, was exhausted in most parts of the world by 2011. Because of this, IPv6,
with 3.4 x 1038 addresses, replaced IPv4. IPv6 is available on non-LTE devices, but it
is worth noting that while the goal is for LTE devices to support IPv6, not all handset
manufacturers support NAT64 (Network Address Translation from IPv6 to IPv4). This
means that developers should continue to ensure their apps are IPv6 and IPv4
compliant.
7. Best practices
This section discusses the best practices for addressing the top issues 18 concerning radio
resources.
a ) Da ta ca p
Due to the limited spectrum, data caps are still present in LTE
data plans and users are charged for overages. Note that data
caps count data uploads AND downloads. However, using tools
such as AT&T ARO, developers can identify and work to
eliminate duplicate content that can comprise as much as 20%
of HTTP traffic.
As a comparison, a YouTube SD (standard definition) video on a
tablet size screen (10 in) will consume 60 MB per hour while HD (high definition)
© 2012 AT&T Intellectual Property Best Practices for 3G and 4G App Development
video like that on YouTube HD or Netflix will consume 150 MB per hour on the same
screen. So, it’s clear that users can quickly exceed the cap of the most popular data
plans (which are typically a few GB per month) with 50 hours of SD video or 20 hours
of HD video, and thus incur overage charges.
Data consumption will obviously vary by screen size and by the types of content that
users consume. To estimate daily and monthly usage for an end user, developers can
use AT&T’s data calculator 19.
b) B a tte r y L ife
device batteries faster. Key Lesson: An app that keeps trying to pull down signals
from a congested network rapidly sucks the life from batteries.
c) S peed
There are three metrics that quantify what users mean when
they say an app “feels” fast: bandwidth, latency and app
responsiveness. This section focuses on principles that
developers can follow to further enhance the user’s feeling of
using a fast application.
v) Pre-fetch 25
Leverage LTE’s larger bandwidth and lower latency by anticipating and pre-
loading data that the user wants. This requires experimenting with algorithms
that work best for your app. Data retrieval during hours of expected high traffic
can put your user and the network under unnecessary pressure. Consider when
your application or its user may require some particular data and schedule its
retrieval ahead of time.
This technique, although imperfect, provides for a better user experience. An
example of where pre-fetching becomes a problem is when the app pre-fetches
so much data that it is never used. This overuse drains customer’s data caps
rapidly in addition to using excessive memory.
d) R obu s tnes s
3G HSPA 4G LTE
© 2012 AT&T Intellectual Property Best Practices for 3G and 4G App Development
• 3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP) which has become the focal point
for mobile systems beyond 3G (www.3gpp.org).
8. Topics to explore
There are several more best practices to explore in addition to the ones described in this
white paper:
Legal: The legal and ethical issues around collecting, managing and transferring
end users’ personal information has not changed with LTE. Developers are
expected to have experts in privacy law and policy to guide them in the
management of end users’ information. In the U.S., the FTC (Federal Trade
Commission) has brought several enforcement actions against app developers
accused of misusing user data.
Biz Dev: This white paper also does not cover business models like in-app
advertising, in-app purchases, or freemium models. Nor does it cover which
category of apps – games, utilities, social, news, etc. – are the most popular to
develop. If users implement advertising in their apps, however, this paper
provides the background and tools needed to optimize apps since much of the
signaling in apps comes from advertising.
Hardware platform: Mobile devices now not only include laptops and
smartphones but tablets, e-readers, and potentially other consumer devices.
This white paper is device agnostic. While this paper references primarily LTE
smartphones and to a lesser extent tablets, readers should assume that
statements about these devices could be extended to other consumer devices.
Software platform: Developers are also assumed to be familiar with the best
practices for building apps for their mobile OS such as iOS, Android, Windows
Phone, and BlackBerry OS.
© 2012 AT&T Intellectual Property Best Practices for 3G and 4G App Development
Non AT&T carriers: This paper takes a US-centric, AT&T LTE approach. However,
best practices should apply equally well to LTE or WiMax app development for
other carriers like Verizon, T-Mobile, Sprint, and Clearwire.
9. Conclusion
LTE, the fourth generation mobile network, is currently being deployed nationwide. This
4G network has a significantly higher bandwidth, lower latency, better security, and
more types of QoS than earlier generations. All these benefits offer the opportunity for
developers to build enhanced applications not possible with 3G. Some possible
applications are live, HD broadcasts from smartphones or the ability to play latency-
sensitive, interactive games.
However, this network is only one of three elements in an ecosystem that has the
potential for new revenue opportunities for carriers and developers. Networks, devices,
and apps have to work seamlessly together to drive consumer adoption and thus
revenue.
That’s why this white paper focuses on technical best practices for developers to follow
when building LTE optimized apps. For the same reason, non-technical topics such as
business development or licensing are not addressed. These technical best practices are
identical to 3G best practices for areas that customers can perceive: data caps, battery
life, speed, and robustness. Developers only need to learn a few, slight modifications
around LTE buffering and radio states that differ from 3G best practices. Tools such as
AT&T ARO and websites such as 3GPP continue to be vital to ensure apps incorporate
the best practices for app development.
Due to the vast amount of detail that could be written around each best practice, this
paper intentionally stays at a high-level. However, developers are encouraged to take a
deeper dive into these topics using the references section.
© 2012 AT&T Intellectual Property Best Practices for 3G and 4G App Development
2 . H ow do I te s t th e s pe e d of m y h a n ds e t’s 4 G n e tw or k ?
For a manual test, download a speed test app from your phone’s app store (e.g.
www. speedtest.net). Make sure you turn-off Wi-Fi before running your speed test
since speed test apps measure Wi-Fi speeds if enabled.
3 . H o w d o I te ll w h ic h c e llu la r n e tw o r k ( 2 G , 3 G , 4 G H S P A + o r 4 G
L T E ) m y h a n ds e t is c o n n e c te d to ?
Your cellular network is usually, but not always, identified by the icon next to the
bars or signal indicators on your smart phone’s screen.
For example, in the U.S. on AT&T’s HSPA+ network with an iPhone, you may get 4G
displayed. But outside the U.S., on a similar HSPA+ network, 3G may be displayed
instead. Some U.S. only examples are:
AT&T Network Icon Displayed
1G 1G or none
2G 2G or none
2.5G G or GPRS
2.75G E or EDGE
3G 3G
4G HSPA+ 4G or H+
4G LTE 4G LTE
© 2012 AT&T Intellectual Property Best Practices for 3G and 4G App Development
References
1
Mobile apps one of three biggest drivers. http://goldengekko.blogspot.com/2010/11/mobile-apps-one-of-3-
biggest-drivers.html
2
Data Deluge. http://gigaom.com/broadband/despite-critics-cisco-stands-by-its-data-
deluge/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+jkOnTheRun+%28GigaOM%
3A+Mobile%29
3
Global Mobile Data Traffic Growth.
http://ibmtelconewsletter.files.wordpress.com/2011/02/wp_closing_mobile_data_revenue_gap_a4.pdf
4
AT&T LTE speeds & latencies: http://www.lightreading.com/document.asp?doc_id=212403
5
LTE speeds: https://developer.att.com/developer/forward.jsp?passedItemId=2400016
6
QoS Services: http://developer.att.com/home/community/conference/LTE_Implications_of_Services.pdf
7
PCRF examples: http://whitelassiblog.wordpress.com/2011/02/16/policy-control-and-qos-awareness-for-ims-
and-lte-an-evolving-trend/
8
U.S. rapidly becoming a nation of gamers: http://www.digitaltrends.com/gaming/study-us-rapidly-becoming-a-
nation-of-gamers/
9
AT&T’s Application Resource Optimization Optimizer (ARO) is downloadable here
10
M2M needs LTE: http://m2m.tmcnet.com/topics/m2mevolution/articles/251313-why-m2m-needs-lte-vice-
versa.htm
11
M2M needs LTE: http://m2m.tmcnet.com/topics/m2mevolution/articles/251313-why-m2m-needs-lte-vice-
versa.htm
12
Why LTE sucks (your battery): http://gigaom.com/mobile/why-lte-sucks-your-battery-that-
is/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed:+OmMalik+%28GigaOM:+Tech%29
13
Handovers from LTE to HSPA+:
http://www.accuver.com/storage/downloads/AccuverResource_attdrivetestresultsandreportpreview_1326383911.pdf
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More Fuel for the Signaling Storm: http://lteconference.wordpress.com/2012/04/20/new-ipad-more-fuel-for-the-
signalling-storm/
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Want to give your apps a boost? http://developer.att.com/home/community/conference/Boost_App.pdf
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Avoid Network Meltdowns. http://www.ospmag.com/issue/article/Avoid-Network-Meltdown
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AT&T’s Application Resource Optimization Optimizer (ARO) is downloadable here
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Top wireless issues and their solutions.
http://developer.att.com/home/develop/referencesandtutorials/networkapibestpractices/Top_Radio_Resource_Issues
_in_Mobile_Application_Development.pdf
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AT&T data calculator: http://www.att.com/standalone/data-calculator/index.html
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Use Wi-Fi as much as possible. http://developer.att.com/developer/forward.jsp?passedItemId=9700190
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A Call for More Energy Efficient Apps: Minimize battery drain & reduce latencies
http://www.research.att.com/articles/featured_stories/2011_03/201102_Energy_efficient?fbid=bFz29dRdhkG
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Reduce inefficient connections with periodic transfers.
http://developer.att.com/developer/forward.jsp?passedItemId=9700174
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Handle multiple simultaneous TCP connections.
http://developer.att.com/developer/forward.jsp?passedItemId=9700172
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Handle duplicate content and caching. http://developer.att.com/developer/forward.jsp?passedItemId=9700172
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Utilize pre-fetching. http://developer.att.com/developer/forward.jsp?passedItemId=9700172
© 2012 AT&T Intellectual Property Best Practices for 3G and 4G App Development
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Transition to IPv6: https://developer.att.com/developer/forward.jsp?passedItemId=3100042
Note: Some developer.att.com URLs require developer account credentials in order to login and access the content.