Evolution of Telecommunications
Evolution of Telecommunications
Evolution of Telecommunications
INDEX
Definition Introduction to telecommunications Major creators of telecommunications Evolution of Telecommunications Generations of telecommunications 1st Generation 2nd Generation 3rd Generation 4th Generation Conclusion
DEFINITION OF TELECOMMUNICATIONS
Telecommunications eliminated a master-to-servant
relationship: replacing the service of a messenger by mechanical telegraph in 1794, by copper wires in 1837, by electromagnetic waves in 1896, and by optical fiber in 1973.
Edouard Estaunie (18621942) in 1904 In his book he
defined telecommunication as information exchange by means of electrical signals. Estaunie thus limited telecommunications explicitly to electrical signals.
12 fibers each with a capacity of 40 WDM 10-Gbps channels, thus a total of 4.8
The telephone era begun in 1876 in the United States with the operation of a telephone line across a 2-mile stretch between Boston and Cambridge, Massachusetts, with telephone apparatus produced by Bell.
Heinrich Rudolf Hertz (18571894) Heinrich Hertz laid the basis for radio transmission with successful experiments in 18871889 that proved the existence of electromagnetic radiation and its similarity to the behavior of light.
The trunk of the tree represents the technological prerequisites for successive unfolding of the various telecommunication domains into the branches of the tree The leaves of the branches represent evolution within the separate telecommunication domains
EVOLUTION OF TELECOMMUNICATION
The bases of telecommunications, and thus the roots of the tree, are science and industrialization.
EVOLUTION OF TELECOMMUNICATION
The basic theory of sound developed by Helmholtz supported the evolution from telegraphy to telephony. The early automation of industrial processes enabled the replacement of manual switchboards by automatic switching devices.
The discovery of electromagnetic radiation and the subsequent development of devices for generating and detecting such waves led to the development of radio-telegraphy.
The creation of electronic tubes (diodes and triodes) started the electronic era, which enabled the evolution from radio-telegraphy to radio-telephony and mobile radio.
EVOLUTION OF TELECOMMUNICATION The feedback principle applied in electronic circuitry facilitated the generation of high frequencies and thus the development of medium- and shortwave radio transmission and a new technology of circuit
combination: carrier frequency, or multiplexing.
The development of very high frequency generators in 1920 and velocitymodulated electronic tubes in the early 1930s made radio-relay transmission possible,
Rockets, transistors, and solar cells were the ingredients for the satellite branch. The laser and extremely pure glass enabled the fiber optics branch to grow.
ICs (integrated circuits) and microprocessors were the nourishment for the cellular radio branch. The convergence of communications and computers (C&C) and the application of CD-ROMs for high-volume data storage is currently leading to multimedia services
EVOLUTION OF TELECOMMUNICATION(FUTURE)
The first new leaf will probably represent an entirely new range of combined optical transmission-
switching systems.
Another leaf might represent wireless broadband links in metropolitan areas provided by subspace flying base stations located in unmanned balloons and airplanes circling in the stratosphere.
Chronology of telecommunications.
OPTICAL TELEGRAPHY
James
Maxwell
Rudolph
Hertz
1895-1901
Guglielmo
Marconi
1980s
Analog Voice
1G
AMPS
Typical 2.4 Kbps
TACS
NM
1G
Advanced Mobile Phone Services (AMPS) Deployed in US , Japan : 1983
Nordic Mobile Telephony (NMT) Sweden, Denmark, Norway, Finland : 1981
1990s
Digital Voice
2G
GSM
9.6 - 14.4 Kbps (circuit data)
CDMA
TDMA
2G GSM
Global system for Mobile
Based on TDMA ; Europe
2G - CDMA
Code Division Multiple Access
cdmaOne or IS-95 All users use same freq band ; 800 Mhz Major success in Korea, Used by Verizon and Sprint Easy Migration to 3G
Circuit Switching
Packet Switching
A shared highway
2001
2.5G
GPRS Packet Data
2.5G - GPRS
General Packet Radio Service - An Overlay
Multi-slot class
Channel Encoding used.
HSCSD
High-Speed Circuit-Switched Data. An enhancement to CSD Multiple timeslots used. Data rates up to 38.4 Kbps (4 times CSD).
In reality supports 14.4Kbps.
2003
Packet Data
2.75G
EDGE CDMA 1xRTT
EDGE
EDGE (Enhanced Data rate for GSM) Superset of GPRS. Data rate = 4 times GPRS. 9 MCS (Modulation and coding schemes) used Gaussian min shift keying and 8PSK.
Evolved EDGE
Data rate = 1Mbps Encoding technique 32QAM and 16QAM. Requires simple network enhancements with software update.
CDMA 1xRTT
1x is an abbreviation of 1xRTT (1x Radio Transmission
calls
per
Encoding technique:
BPSK for forward and reverse link.
114 Kbps
GPRS
384 Kbps
EDGE
3GPP
1.92 Mbps
14 Mbps
100 Mbps
LTE
WCDM A
HSPA
114 Kbps
1xRTT
3GPP2
2.4 Mbps 288 Mbps
EV-DO
UMB
(abandoned 2008 Nov & favoring LTE)
CDMA2000 IMT2000
3G
W-CDMA (UMTS)
UMTS
UMTS - Universal Mobile Telecommunications System. Also known as W-CDMA. W-CDMA uses the DS-CDMA and TDD channel access method with a pair of 5 MHz channels.
Frequency bands:
Uplink 1885-2025 MHz (mobile-to-base ) Downlink 2110-2200 MHz (base-to-mobile).
CDMA2000
EVDO Rel 0 (Evolution-Data Optimized or
Encoding technique:
Forward link 16QAM.
Reverse link - BPSK.
HSDPA
HSUPA
3.5G
EVDO-Rev A EVDO-Rev B
HSPA
High Speed Packet Access is a collection of two High Speed Downlink Packet Access (HSDPA)
Data rates for Forward link - 14.4Mbps. Encoding technique QPSK and 16QAM
HSPA+
Evolved High Speed Packet Access (HSPA+) Data rates:
Forward link - 42Mbps. Reverse link - 22Mbps.
EVDO Rev A
EVDO Rev A (Revision A) Also called as EV-DV (Evolution Data/Voice) Data rates:
Forward link - 3.1Mbps. Reverse link - 1.8Mbps.
Encoding technique:
Forward link 16QAM. Reverse link - QPSK and 8PSK.
EVDO Rev B
Combine up to fifteen 1.25MHz carriers (20MHz) in
forward and/or reverse link. Carriers not physically combined and not adjacent to each other.
Forward link = 3.1Mbps*15channels = 47Mbps. Reverse link = 1.8Mbps*15channels = 27Mbps.
Data rate:
Encoding technique 64QAM. Uplink data rate increases from 3.1Mbps to 4.9Mbps per channel.
Video Services
CHANGE S IN HANDSE TS
TECHNOLOGIES ADOPTED
SPEEDS
Conclusion
India is huge market and none of service providers can dare to ignore its
potential. Thats why Indian mobile service provider industry is growing leap and bounce for the last decade. This journey of 1 million to 50 million will keep it pace until each citizen in India will have his own mobile. Industry has many phases in its growth. Now mobile doesnt mean a only a medium of communication. Services providers are now willing to provide varies facilities like entertainment (music, video etc.) and even banking also. We can say that business is transforming in e-commerce to m-commerce (mobilecommerce). In short we can say drastic change has came in the industry along
with expanding its base in subscribers, they are keeping eye not only to offer
new facilities but also to be the first to provide it