3G Tutorial
3G Tutorial
www.nmscommunications.com
Outline
www.nmscommunications.com
Outline (continued)
z Evolving services
SMS, EMS, MMS messaging
Location
Video and IP multimedia
z Applications & application frameworks
Is there a Killer App?
z Business models
What’s really happening? When?
Slide 4 www.nmscommunications.com
3G Tutorial
z History and Evolution of Mobile Radio
z Evolving Network Architectures
z Evolving Services
z Applications
z Business Models
www.nmscommunications.com
First Mobile Radio Telephone
1924
www.nmscommunications.com
World Telecom Statistics
1200 Crossover
1000 has happened
May 2002 !
800
Landline Subs
(millions)
600
400
200
Mobile Subs
0
92
95
96
01
91
93
94
97
98
99
00
19
19
19
19
19
19
20
19
19
19
20
www.nmscommunications.com
Cellular Mobile Telephony
z Frequency modulation
z Antenna diversity 2 7
3 5 2
z Cellular concept 1 6 3
Bell Labs (1957 & 1960) 4 1 6
2 7 4
z Frequency reuse 5 2 7
Typically every 7 cells 3 5
1 6 3
z Handoff as caller moves 4 1
2 7
z Modified CO switch 5
HLR, paging, handoffs
z Sectors improve reuse
Every 3 cells possible
www.nmscommunications.com
First Generation
z Advanced Mobile Phone Service (AMPS)
US trials 1978; deployed in Japan (’79) & US (’83)
800 MHz band — two 20 MHz bands
TIA-553
Still widely used in US and many parts of the world
z Nordic Mobile Telephony (NMT)
Sweden, Norway, Demark & Finland
Launched 1981; now largely retired
450 MHz; later at 900 MHz (NMT900)
z Total Access Communications System (TACS)
British design; similar to AMPS; deployed 1985
Some TACS-900 systems still in use in Europe
www.nmscommunications.com
Second Generation — 2G
z Digital systems
z Leverage technology to increase capacity
Speech compression; digital signal processing
z Utilize/extend “Intelligent Network” concepts
z Improve fraud prevention
z Add new services
z There are a wide diversity of 2G systems
IS-54/ IS-136 North American TDMA; PDC (Japan)
iDEN
DECT and PHS
IS-95 CDMA (cdmaOne)
GSM
www.nmscommunications.com
D-AMPS/ TDMA & PDC
z Speech coded as digital bit stream
Compression plus error protection bits
Aggressive compression limits voice quality
z Time division multiple access (TDMA)
3 calls per radio channel using repeating time slices
z Deployed 1993 (PDC 1994)
Development through 1980s; bakeoff 1987
z IS-54 / IS-136 standards in US TIA
z ATT Wireless & Cingular use IS-136 today
Plan to migrate to GSM and then to W-CDMA
z PDC dominant cellular system in Japan today
NTT DoCoMo has largest PDC network
www.nmscommunications.com
iDEN
z Used by Nextel
z Motorola proprietary system
Time division multiple access technology
Based on GSM architecture
z 800 MHz private mobile radio (PMR) spectrum
Just below 800 MHz cellular band
z Special protocol supports fast “Push-to-Talk”
Digital replacement for old PMR services
z Nextel has highest APRU in US market due to
“Direct Connect” push-to-talk service
www.nmscommunications.com
DECT and PHS
z Also based on time division multiple access
z Digital European Cordless Telephony
Focus on business use, i.e. wireless PBX
Very small cells; In building propagation issues
Wide bandwidth (32 kbps channels)
High-quality voice and/or ISDN data
z Personal Handiphone Service
Similar performance (32 kbps channels)
Deployed across Japanese cities (high pop. density)
4 channel base station uses one ISDN BRI line
Base stations on top of phone booths
Legacy in Japan; new deployments in China today
www.nmscommunications.com
North American CDMA (cdmaOne)
www.nmscommunications.com
cdmaOne — IS-95
www.nmscommunications.com
GSM
z « Groupe Special Mobile », later changed to
« Global System for Mobile »
Joint European effort beginning in 1982
Focus on seamless roaming across Europe
z Services launched 1991
Time division multiple access (8 users per 200KHz)
900 MHz band; later extended to 1800MHz
Added 1900 MHz (US PCS bands)
z GSM is dominant world standard today
Well defined interfaces; many competitors
Network effect (Metcalfe’s law) took hold in late 1990s
Tri-band GSM phone can roam the world today
www.nmscommunications.com
Distribution of GSM Subscribers
PDC
CDMA
7%
12%
US TDMA
10%
GSM
Source: EMC World Cellular / GSM Association 71%
www.nmscommunications.com
1G — Separate Frequencies
30 KHz
30 KHz
30 KHz
Frequency
30 KHz
30 KHz
30 KHz
30 KHz
30 KHz
www.nmscommunications.com
2G — TDMA
Time Division Multiple Access
200 KHz
Frequency
200 KHz
200 KHz
200 KHz
Time
www.nmscommunications.com
2G & 3G — CDMA
Code Division Multiple Access
z Spread spectrum modulation
Originally developed for the military
Resists jamming and many kinds of interference
Coded modulation hidden from those w/o the code
z All users share same (large) block of
spectrum
One for one frequency reuse
Soft handoffs possible
z Almost all accepted 3G radio standards are
based on CDMA
CDMA2000, W-CDMA and TD-SCDMA
www.nmscommunications.com
Multi-Access Radio Techniques
www.nmscommunications.com
Courtesy of Suresh Goyal & Rich Howard
www.nmscommunications.com
Courtesy of Suresh Goyal & Rich Howard
www.nmscommunications.com
Courtesy of Suresh Goyal & Rich Howard
www.nmscommunications.com
Courtesy of Suresh Goyal & Rich Howard
www.nmscommunications.com
3G Vision
www.nmscommunications.com
International Standardization
www.nmscommunications.com
IMT-2000 Vision Includes
LAN, WAN and Satellite Services
Global
Satellite
Suburban Urban
In-Building
Picocell
Microcell
Macrocell
Basic Terminal
PDA Terminal
Audio/Visual Terminal
www.nmscommunications.com
IMT-2000 Radio Standards
z IMT-SC* Single Carrier (UWC-136): EDGE
GSM evolution (TDMA); 200 KHz channels; sometimes
called “2.75G”
z IMT-MC* Multi Carrier CDMA: CDMA2000
Evolution of IS-95 CDMA, i.e. cdmaOne
z IMT-DS* Direct Spread CDMA: W-CDMA
New from 3GPP; UTRAN FDD
z IMT-TC** Time Code CDMA
New from 3GPP; UTRAN TDD
New from China; TD-SCDMA
z IMT-FT** FDMA/TDMA (DECT legacy)
www.nmscommunications.com
CDMA2000 Pros and Cons
www.nmscommunications.com
W-CDMA (UMTS) Pros and Cons
z Wideband CDMA
Standard for Universal Mobile Telephone Service
(UMTS)
z Committed standard for Europe and likely
migration path for other GSM operators
Leverages GSM’s dominant position
z Requires substantial new spectrum
5 MHz each way (symmetric)
z Legally mandated in Europe and elsewhere
z Sales of new spectrum completed in Europe
At prices that now seem exorbitant
www.nmscommunications.com
TD-SCDMA
www.nmscommunications.com
Migration To 3G 2.75G 3G
Multimedia
Intermediate
2.5G Multimedia
2G Packet Data
1G Digital Voice
Analog Voice
GPRS W-CDMA
GSM
EDGE (UMTS)
115 Kbps
NMT 9.6 Kbps 384 Kbps Up to 2 Mbps
GSM/
TD-SCDMA
TDMA GPRS
(Overlay)
TACS 2 Mbps?
115 Kbps
9.6 Kbps
iDEN iDEN
9.6 Kbps PDC (Overlay)
9.6 Kbps
AMPS CDMA 1xRTT cdma2000
CDMA 1X-EV-DV
14.4 Kbps
PHS
(IP-Based) 144 Kbps Over 2.4 Mbps
/ 64 Kbps
PHS 64 Kbps
2003 - 2004+
2003+
2001+ Source: U.S. Bancorp Piper Jaffray
1992 - 2000+
1984 - 1996+
www.nmscommunications.com
Subscribers: GSM vs CDMA
z Cost of moving from GSM to cdmaOne overrides the
benefit of the CDMA migration path
www.nmscommunications.com
Mobile Wireless Spectrum
Bands Frequencies GSM/
(MHz) (MHz) Regions EDGE WCDMA CDMA2000
www.nmscommunications.com
Prospects for Global Roaming
www.nmscommunications.com
3G Tutorial
z History and Evolution of Mobile Radio
z Evolving Network Architectures
z Evolving Services
z Applications
z Business Models
www.nmscommunications.com
Evolving CN Architectures
z Two widely deployed architectures today
z GSM-MAP — used by GSM operators
“Mobile Application Part” defines extra (SS7-based)
signaling for mobility, authentication, etc.
z ANSI-41 MAP — used with AMPS, TDMA &
cdmaOne
TIA (ANSI) standard for “cellular radio
telecommunications inter-system operation”
z Each evolving to common “all IP” vision
“All IP” still being defined — many years away
GAIT (GSM ANSI Interoperability Team) provides a
path for interoperation today
www.nmscommunications.com
Typical 2G Architecture
PSDN
BSC
BTS
BSC
MSC/VLR
PLMN
MSC/VLR
BSC
BTS — Base Transceiver Station
BSC — Base Station Controller
GMSC
www.nmscommunications.com
Network Planes
z Like PSTN, 2G mobile networks have one plane for
voice circuits and another plane for signaling
z Some elements reside only in the signaling plane
HLR, VLR, SMS Center, …
HLR SMS-SC
MSC Signaling Plane (SS7)
VLR MSC
MSC
www.nmscommunications.com
Signaling in Core Network
z Based on SS7
ISUP and specific Application Parts
z GSM MAP and ANSI-41 services
Mobility, call-handling, O&M
Authentication, supplementary services
SMS, …
z Location registers for mobility management
HLR: home location register has permanent data
VLR: visitor location register keeps local copy for
roamers
www.nmscommunications.com
PSTN-to-Mobile Call
PLMN PLMN PSTN
(Visitor) (Home)
(SCP) HLR
Signaling SCP
over SS7 Where is the subscriber?
4 2
Provide Roaming 3
5
Routing Info
VMSC 6 GMSC 1
www.nmscommunications.com
GSM 2G Architecture
NSS
BSS
E PSTN
Abis
A
PSTN
B
BSC C
MS MSC GMSC
D
BTS VLR
SS7
H
HLR
AuC
www.nmscommunications.com
TFO Concepts
z Improve voice quality by disabling unneeded
transcoders during mobile-to-mobile calls
z Operate with existing networks (BSCs, MSCs)
New TRAU negotiates TFO in-band after call setup
TFO frames use LSBits of 64 Kbps circuit to carry
compressed speech frames and TFO signaling
MSBits still carry normal G.711 speech samples
z Limitations
Same speech codec in each handset
Digital transparency in core network (EC off!)
TFO disabled upon cell handover, call transfer, in-
band DTMF, announcements or conferencing
www.nmscommunications.com
TFO – Tandem Free Operation
z No TFO : 2 unneeded transcoders in path
C GSM Coding D G.711 / 64 kb C GSM Coding D
D C D C
Abis Ater A
TRAU PSTN* TRAU
MS BTS BTS MS
BSC BSC
MSC MSC
Abis Ater A
TRAU PSTN* TRAU
MS BTS BTS MS
BSC BSC
MSC MSC
www.nmscommunications.com
New Vocoders: AMR & SMV
www.nmscommunications.com
Enhancing GSM
www.nmscommunications.com
GPRS — 2.5G for GSM
www.nmscommunications.com
2.5G / 3G Adds IP Data
No Changes for Voice Calls
3G Network Layout
Internet
(TCP/IP)
IP Gateway
Network
Mobile Switching
Management
Center
(HLR)
Network
Mobile Switching
Management
Center
(HLR)
IP Gateway
Internet
(TCP/IP)
www.nmscommunications.com
2.5G Architectural Detail
2G MS (voice only)
NSS
BSS
E PSTN
Abis
A
PSTN
B
BSC C
MS MSC GMSC
D
BTS VLR
Gs
SS7
H
Gb
2G+ MS (voice & data)
Gr HLR
AuC
Gc
Gn Gi
PSDN
SGSN IP GGSN
BSS — Base Station System NSS — Network Sub-System SGSN — Serving GPRS Support Node
BTS — Base Transceiver Station MSC — Mobile-service Switching Controller GGSN — Gateway GPRS Support Node
BSC — Base Station Controller VLR — Visitor Location Register
HLR — Home Location Register GPRS — General Packet Radio Service
AuC — Authentication Server
GMSC — Gateway MSC
www.nmscommunications.com
GSM Evolution for Data Access
2 Mbps
UMTS
384 kbps
115 kbps EDGE
GPRS
9.6 kbps
GSM
GSM evolution 3G
www.nmscommunications.com
EDGE
www.nmscommunications.com
3G Partnership Project (3GPP)
z 3GPP defining migration from GSM to UMTS
(W-CDMA)
Core network evolves from GSM-only to support
GSM, GPRS and new W-CDMA facilities
z 3GPP Release 99
Adds 3G radios
z 3GPP Release 4
Adds softswitch/ voice gateways and packet core
z 3GPP Release 5
First IP Multimedia Services (IMS) w/ SIP & QoS
z 3GPP Release 6
“All IP” network; contents of r6 still being defined
www.nmscommunications.com
3G rel99 Architecture (UMTS) —
3G Radios
2G MS (voice only)
CN
BSS
E PSTN
Abis
A
PSTN
B
BSC C
MSC GMSC
Gb D
BTS VLR
Gs
SS7
H
2G+ MS (voice & data)
IuCS
RNS
Gr HLR
AuC
ATM Gc
Iub
IuPS
Gn Gi
PSDN
RNC IP
SGSN GGSN
Node B
3G UE (voice & data)
BSS — Base Station System CN — Core Network SGSN — Serving GPRS Support Node
BTS — Base Transceiver Station MSC — Mobile-service Switching Controller GGSN — Gateway GPRS Support Node
BSC — Base Station Controller VLR — Visitor Location Register
HLR — Home Location Register UMTS — Universal Mobile Telecommunication System
RNS — Radio Network System AuC — Authentication Server
RNC — Radio Network Controller GMSC — Gateway MSC
www.nmscommunications.com
3G rel4 Architecture (UMTS) —
Soft Switching
2G MS (voice only)
CN
CS-MGW
Nb
BSS
CS-MGW
A
Abis Nc PSTN PSTN
Mc
Mc
B
BSC C
MSC Server GMSC server
Gb D
BTS VLR
Gs SS7
H
2G+ MS (voice & data)
IuCS
RNS IP/ATM
Gr HLR
AuC
ATM Gc
Iub
IuPS
Gn Gi
PSDN
RNC
SGSN GGSN
Node B
3G UE (voice & data)
BSS — Base Station System CN — Core Network SGSN — Serving GPRS Support Node
BTS — Base Transceiver Station MSC — Mobile-service Switching Controller GGSN — Gateway GPRS Support Node
BSC — Base Station Controller VLR — Visitor Location Register
HLR — Home Location Register
RNS — Radio Network System AuC — Authentication Server
RNC — Radio Network Controller GMSC — Gateway MSC
www.nmscommunications.com
Transcoder Free Operation (TrFO)
www.nmscommunications.com
TrFO + TFO Example
z 2G handset to 3G handset: by combining TrFO and
TFO, in-path transcoders can be avoided
2G PLMN TRAU
CS-MGW
www.nmscommunications.com
3G rel5 Architecture (UMTS) —
IP Multimedia
2G MS (voice only)
CN
CS-MGW
Nb
BSS
CS-MGW
A/IuCS
Abis Nc PSTN PSTN
Mc
Mc
B
BSC C
MSC Server GMSC server
Gb/IuPS D
BTS VLR
Gs SS7
H
2G+ MS (voice & data) ATM
IuCS
RNS IP/ATM
Gr HSS
AuC
Gc
Iub
IuPS
Gn Gi
IP Network
RNC
SGSN GGSN
Node B
3G UE (voice & data) IM-MGW
IM
IM — IP Multimedia sub-system Gs PSTN
MRF — Media Resource Function IP
CSCF — Call State Control Function Mc
Mg
MGCF — Media Gateway Control Function (Mc=H248,Mg=SIP) MRF
MGCF
IM-MGW — IP Multimedia-MGW
CSCF
www.nmscommunications.com
3GPP Rel.6 Objectives
www.nmscommunications.com
3GPP2 Defines IS-41 Evolution
www.nmscommunications.com
2G cdmaOne (IS-95 + IS-41)
BTS — Base Transceiver Station
BSC — Base Station Controller
IS-95
MS — Mobile Station
MSC — Mobile Switching Center
HLR — Home Location Registry
SMS-SC — Short Message
BTS Service — Serving Center
A Ref (A1, A2, A5)
STM — Synchronous Transfer Mode
MS STM over T1/T3
BSC
Proprietary Interface HLR
MS
BSC
SMS-
Proprietary Interface
SC
A1 — Signaling interface for call control and mobility A5 — Full duplex bearer interface byte stream (SMS ?)
Management between MSC and BSC A7 — Bearer interface for inter-BSC mobile handoff
www.nmscommunications.com
CDMA2000 1x Network
HLR
STM over T1/T3 or
IS-2000 AAL1 over SONET
PST N
A Ref (A1, A2, A5) STM over
T1/T3
MSC
BTS
www.nmscommunications.com
Packet Data Serving Node (PDSN)
www.nmscommunications.com
AAA Server and Home Agent
z AAA server
Authentication: PPP and mobile IP connections
Authorization: service profile and security key
distribution and management
Accounting: usage data for billing
z Mobile IP Home Agent
Track location of mobile IP subscribers when they
move from one network to another
Receive packets on behalf of the mobile node when
node is attached to a foreign network and deliver
packets to mobile’s current point of attachment
www.nmscommunications.com
1xEVDO — IP Data Only
IP BTS - IP Base Transceiver Station
IP BSC - IP Base Station Controller
IS-2000
AAA - Authentication, Authorization,
and Accounting
PDSN - Packet Data Serving Node
Home Agent - Mobile IP Home Agent
IP
BTS
Internet
IP IP
Firewall Router
IP BSC IP
Router
IS-2000
www.nmscommunications.com
1XEVDV — IP Data and Voice
IS-2000 S IP SG W
MGCF
P ro x y
(Softswitch) P ST N
H.248 (Maybe MGCP)
SIP
Internet
www.nmscommunications.com
Approach for Merging 3GPP &
3GPP2 Core Network Protocols
L3 L3
(UMTS) (cdma2000)
www.nmscommunications.com
Gateway Location Register
www.nmscommunications.com
Gateway Location Register
Example
z Mobile Station roaming in a PLMN with a different
signaling protocol
HLR
GSM MAP
ANSI-41 Home PLMN
www.nmscommunications.com
3GPP / 3GPP2 Harmonization
www.nmscommunications.com
3G Tutorial
z History and Evolution of Mobile Radio
z Evolving Network Architectures
z Evolving Services
z Applications
z Business Models
www.nmscommunications.com
Up and Coming Mobile Services
www.nmscommunications.com
Short Message Service (SMS)
z Point-to-point, short, text message service
z Messages over signaling channel (MAP or IS-41)
z SMSC stores-and-forwards SMSs; delivery reports
z SME is any data terminal or Mobile Station
SMS-GMSC
E PSDN
A
B SC
BTS BSC C SMS-IWMSC
MS MSC PC
SME VLR
www.nmscommunications.com
SMS Principles
z Basic services
SM MT (Mobile Terminated)
SM MO (Mobile Originated)
(3GPP2) SM MO can be cancelled
(3GPP2) User can acknowledge
z SM Service Center (3GPP) aka
Message Center (3GPP2)
Relays and store-and-forwards SMSs
z Payload of up to 140 bytes, but
Can be compressed (MS-to-MS)
And/or segmented in several SMs
www.nmscommunications.com
Delivery (MT)
Submission (MO)
MS SC
Report
z Delivery / Submission report
Optional in 3GPP2
z Messages-Waiting
SC informs HLR/VLR that a message could not be
delivered to MS
z Alert-SC
HLR informs SC that the MS is again ready to
receive
z All messages over signaling channels
Usually SS7; SMSC may have IP option
www.nmscommunications.com
EMS Principles
www.nmscommunications.com
MMS Principles (1)
z Non-real-time, multi-media message service
Text; Speech (AMR coding)
Audio (MP3, synthetic MIDI)
Image, graphics (JPEG, GIF, PNG)
Video (MPEG4, H.263)
Will evolve with multimedia technologies
z Uses IP data path & IP protocols (not SS7)
WAP, HTTP, SMTP, etc.
z Adapts to terminal capabilities
Media format conversions (JPEG to GIF)
Media type conversions (fax to image)
SMS (2G) terminal inter-working
www.nmscommunications.com
MMS Principles (2)
www.nmscommunications.com
MMS Architecture
SMTP, POP/IMAP
SN SN
MMS Relay / Server
SOAP/HTTP SN
(*) Optional
www.nmscommunications.com
Location
www.nmscommunications.com
Location Technology
www.nmscommunications.com
Location-Based Services
z Emergency services
E911 - Enhanced 911
z Value-added personal services
friend finder, directions
z Commercial services
coupons or offers from nearby stores
z Network internal
Traffic & coverage measurements
z Lawful intercept extensions
law enforcement locates suspect
www.nmscommunications.com
Location Information
www.nmscommunications.com
US E911 Phase II Architecture
Public
PDE
ESRK
ESRK Service
& voice
& voice Answering
Point
BSC Access
PDE tandem
MSC
ESRK
Callback #,
Long., Lat.
ESRK
SN
PDE Callback #,
PDE SN Long., Lat. SN
MPC ALI DB
www.nmscommunications.com
3GPP Location Infrastructure
z UE (User Entity)
May assist in position calculation
z LMU (Location Measurement Unit)
distributed among cells
z SMLC (Serving Mobile Location Center)
Standalone equipment (2G) or
integrated into BSC (2G) or RNC (3G)
z Leverages normal infrastructure for transport
and resource management
www.nmscommunications.com
LCS Architecture (3GPP)
LCS signaling (LLP)
LCS signaling (RRLP) over RR/BSSAP LCS signaling in BSSAP-LE
over RR-RRC/BSSAP SN
LCS signaling over MAP GMLC
SMLC Ls
LMU Lr
LMU
(Type B) Abis Lb
(Type A)
Lg
Abis A
Gb
BTS BSC
MSC Lh Le
VLR
Gs SN
Iu
HLR CN GMLC LCS Client
UE Iub
SMLC Lg (LCS Server)
RNC
SGSN
LMU LMU — Location Measurement Unit
Node B SMLC — Serving Mobile Location Center
(LMU type B)
LCS signaling over RANAP GMLC — Gateway Mobile Location Center
www.nmscommunications.com
Location Request
www.nmscommunications.com
3G-324M Video Services
www.nmscommunications.com
Common Technology Platform
for 3G-324M Services
Node B
Iu-cs
RNC MSC
Support for H.323 calls
UTRAN & streaming media
3G-324M
Mobile 3G-324M
UMTS
Core Multi-Media GW
IP Network
Network
H.323
H.323
H.248 or RAS RTP terminal
Streaming/Mail
Soft Switch
media
or Gate Keeper
server
www.nmscommunications.com
Gateway: 3G-324M to
MPEG4 over RTP
Control stacks
ISDN call setup | H.323 or SIP
H.245 negotiation | over TCP
Audio/ RTP
PSTN
video/ RTSP IP
I/F Video repacking
control Packet UDP/IP I/F
of H.263 frames stacks
multiplex stream
H.223 jitter
Audio vocoder
AMR — G.711 buffering
Slide 91 www.nmscommunications.com
Video Messaging System
for 3G-324M
Video mail MP4 files for
64 kbps circuit-switch data
application messages
over PSTN/ 2.5G/ 3G network script and prompts
to 3G-324M video handset
Control stacks
ISDN call setup
H.245 negotiation
Audio/
PSTN
video/ Video buffering
I/F
control Audio/video of H.263 frames
multiplex
sync and
H.223 Audio buffering
stream control
of AMR frames
Slide 92 www.nmscommunications.com
Push-toTalk
VoIP before QoS is Available
z Nextel’s “Direct Connect” service credited
with getting them 20-25% extra ARPU
Based on totally proprietary iDEN
Other carriers extremely jealous
z Push-to-talk is half duplex
Short delays OK
z Issues remain
Always on IP isn’t always on; radio connection
suspended if unused; 2-3 seconds to re-establish
z Sprint has announced they will be offering a
push-to-talk service on their 1xRTT network
www.nmscommunications.com
«All IP» Services
www.nmscommunications.com
IMS / MMD Services
z Presence
z Location
z Instant Messaging (voice+video)
z Conferencing
z Media Streaming / Annoucements
z Multi-player gaming with voice channel
www.nmscommunications.com
3G QoS
www.nmscommunications.com
IMS Concepts (1)
www.nmscommunications.com
IMS Architecture
Media Server
Application Server
Internet
Mb
Gi SIP phone
HSS
ISC Mb
PS Gi/Mb
IM-MGW
UE GGSN MRF Mb
SGSN Cx Mp Mb
Go TDM
Gm
IMS ISUP PSTN
Mw Mg Mn
MGCF
P-CSCF CSCF
CPE
Signaling
SIP
CSCF — Call Session Control Function
IM-MGW — IM-Media Gateway
MGCF — Media Gateway Control Function
MRF — Media Resource Function
www.nmscommunications.com
IMS Concepts (2)
Service control
ISC Internet
Gm Media Server
ISC
PS Home IMS
UE P-CSCF Mw
Application SIP
Servers phone
Gm
Visited IMS
PS
UE P-CSCF
www.nmscommunications.com
MMD Architecture —
3GPP2 MultiMedia Domain
Databases AAA
Internet
Mobile IP
Home Agent
SIP phone
Border
Router
MS Packet Core
Access
Gateway Core QoS Integrated in P-CSCF
Manager
MGW
MRF MRFP
TDM
MMD ISUP PSTN
MRFC
Signaling
MGCF
AAA — Authentication, Authorization & Accounting CPE
Session
MGW — Media Gateway Control IM-MGW + MGCF
Manager P-SCM = P-CSCF
MGCF — Media Gateway Control Function
I-SCM = I-CSCF 3GPP / 3GPP2 mapping
MRFC — Media Resource Function Controller S-SCM = S-CSCF
L-SCM = Border Gateway Control Functions
MRFP — Media Resource Function Processor
www.nmscommunications.com
3G Tutorial
z History and Evolution of Mobile Radio
z Evolving Network Architectures
z Evolving Services
z Applications
z Business Models
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Killer Applications
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2.5G & 3G Application Issues
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Multimodal Services and
Multi-Application Platforms
z Combined voice and data applications
Today, without “all IP” infrastructure
Text messaging plus speech recognition-enabled
voice services
Evolve from as new services become available
z Multi-application platform
Integrate TDM voice and IP data
Support multiple applications
Flexible billing and provisioning
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Sample Multimodal Applications
z Travel information
Make request via voice
Receive response in text
z Directions
Make request via voice
Receive initial response in text
Get updates while traveling via voice
or SMS or rich graphics
z One-to-many messaging
Record message via voice or text
Deliver message via voice, SMS,
WAP, or email
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More Multimodal Examples
z Purchasing famous person’s voice for your
personal answering message
Text or voice menus
Voice to hear message
Voice or text to select (and authorize payment)
z Unified communications
While listening to a voice message from a customer,
obtain a text display of recent customer activity
z Emergency response team
SMS and voice alert
Voice conference, and text updates, while traveling
to site of emergency
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Early Deployments
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Multimodal Applications in the
Evolving Wireless Network
2.5G Wireless Network
Speech
Server Data IP Interface Internet / Core
Base Network SGSN CGSN
(data)
Media
OAM&P
Server
Instant Messaging / Location
Presence 3G MSC Server
and Presence
Message SIP
Gateway Location
H.248
Packet
Interface Core (Packet) RNC
Voice or Data (voice/video) Network
Wireless 3G MSC Gateway
Control
3G Wireless Network
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3G Tutorial
z History and Evolution of Mobile Radio
z Evolving Network Architectures
z Evolving Services
z Applications
z Business Models
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Upgrade Cost, By Technology
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2.5G & 3G Uptake
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3G Spectrum Expensive
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GPRS (2.5G) Less Risky
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EDGE Cheaper and Gives
Near-3G Performance
1 MB File
Modem Technology Throughput Download Speed
GSM/TDMA 2G Wireless <9.6 Kbps ~20 min
Analog Modem Fixed Line Dial-up 9.6 Kbps 16 min
GPRS 2.5G Wireless 30-40 Kbps 4.5 min
ISDN Fixed Line Digital 128 Kbps 1.1 min
CDMA 1x 2.75G Wireless 144 Kbps 50 sec
EDGE 2.75G Wireless 150 - 200 Kbps 36 to 47 sec
DSL Fixed Line DSL 0.7 - 1.5 Mbps 1 to 3 sec
W-CDMA 3G Wireless 1.0 Mbps 1.5 sec
Cable Fixed Line Cable 1.0 - 2.0 Mbps 0.8 to 1.5 sec
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Long Life for 2.5G & 2.75G
“We believe the shelf life of 2.5G and 2.75G will be
significantly longer than most pundits have predicted.
Operators need to gain valuable experience in how to
market packet data services before pushing forward
with the construction of new 3G networks.“
Sam May, US Bancorp Piper Jaffray
www.nmscommunications.com
Critical For 3G —
Continued Growth In China
Likely 3G licensing outcomes:
z China Unicom — cdma2000
z China Mobile — W-CDMA
z China Telecom — W-CDMA/
TD-SCDMA?
z China Netcom — W-CDMA/
TD-SCDMA?
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Business Models
Walled Garden or Wide Open?
z US and European carriers want to capture the
value — be more than just transport
Cautious partnering; Slow roll out of services
z DoCoMo I-Mode service primitive
Small screens, slow (9.6 kbps) data rate
z I-Mode business model wide open
Free development software
No access restrictions
DoCoMo’s “bill-on-behalf” available for 9% share
z I-Mode big success in less than 24 months
55,000 applications, 30M subscribers !
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DoCoMo Has The Right Model
When will the others wake up?
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Biggest Threat to Today’s 3G —
Wireless LANs
z Faster than 3G
11 or 56 Mbps vs. <2 Mbps for 3G when stationary
z Data experience matches the Internet
With the added convenience of mobile
Same user interface (doesn’t rely on small screens)
Same programs, files, applications, Websites.
z Low cost, low barriers to entry
z Organizations can build own networks
Like the Internet, will grow virally
z Opportunity for entrepreneurs!
z Opportunity for wireless operators?
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N M S COMMUNICATIONS
[email protected]
[email protected]
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Additional Reference Material
www.nmscommunications.com
Mobile Standard Organizations
Mobile
ITU Members
Operators
ITU
ARIB
(Japan)
TTC
(Japan)
TTA
(Korea)
ETSI T1 TIA
(Europe) (USA) (USA)
www.nmscommunications.com
Partnership Project and Forums
z ITU IMT-2000 http://www.itu.int/imt2000
z Mobile Partnership Projects
3GPP: http://www.3gpp.org
3GPP2: http://www.3gpp2.org
z Mobile Technical Forums
3G All IP Forum: http://www.3gip.org
IPv6 Forum: http://www.ipv6forum.com
z Mobile Marketing Forums
Mobile Wireless Internet Forum: http://www.mwif.org
UMTS Forum: http://www.umts-forum.org
GSM Forum: http://www.gsmworld.org
Universal Wireless Communication: http://www.uwcc.org
Global Mobile Supplier: http://www.gsacom.com
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Mobile Standards Organizations
z European Technical Standard Institute (Europe):
http://www.etsi.org
z Telecommunication Industry Association (USA):
http://www.tiaonline.org
z Standard Committee T1 (USA):
http://www.t1.org
z China Wireless Telecommunication Standard (China):
http://www.cwts.org
z The Association of Radio Industries and Businesses (Japan):
http://www.arib.or.jp/arib/english/
z The Telecommunication Technology Committee (Japan):
http://www.ttc.or.jp/e/index.html
z The Telecommunication Technology Association (Korea):
http://www.tta.or.kr/english/e_index.htm
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Location-Related Organizations
z LIF, Location Interoperability Forum
http://www.locationforum.org/
Responsible for Mobile Location Protocol (MLP)
Now part of Open Mobile Alliance (OMA)
z OMA, Open Mobile Alliance
http://www.openmobilealliance.org/
Consolidates Open Mobile Architecture, WAP Forum, LIF,
SyncML, MMS Interoperability Group, Wireless Village
z Open GIS Consortium
http://www.opengis.org/
Focus on standards for spatial and location information
z WLIA, Wireless Location Industry Association
http://www.wliaonline.com
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N M S COMMUNICATIONS
[email protected]
[email protected]
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