Mobile Communications: Summer Term 2008
Mobile Communications: Summer Term 2008
Mobile Communications: Summer Term 2008
www.jochenschiller.de
[email protected]
• 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“)
Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen H. Schiller www.jochenschiller.de MC - 2008 1.4
Mobile communication
• Two aspects of mobility:
• user mobility: users communicate (wireless) “anytime, anywhere,
with anyone”
• device portability: devices can be connected anytime, anywhere to
the network
• Wireless vs. mobile Examples
stationary computer
notebook in a hotel
wireless LANs in historic buildings
Personal Digital Assistant (PDA)
• The demand for mobile communication creates the need for
integration of wireless networks into existing fixed networks:
• local area networks: standardization of IEEE 802.11
• Internet: Mobile IP extension of the internet protocol IP
• wide area networks: e.g., internetworking of GSM and ISDN, VoIP
over WLAN and POTS
• 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, ...
UMTS, WLAN,
DAB, DVB, GSM,
cdma2000, TETRA, ...
UMTS
2 Mbit/s
Sensors,
embedded
controllers
Smartphone
• tiny keyboard
Mobile phones
• simple versions
• voice, data
of standard applications
www.scatterweb.net
• simple graphical displays
performance
No clear separation between device types possible
(e.g. smart phones, embedded PCs, …)
Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen H. Schiller www.jochenschiller.de MC - 2008 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 usage of mass memories with moving parts
• flash-memory or ? as alternative
Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen H. Schiller www.jochenschiller.de MC - 2008 1.12
Wireless networks in comparison to
fixed networks
• Higher loss-rates due to interference
• emissions of, e.g., engines, lightning
• Restrictive regulations of frequencies
• frequencies have to be coordinated, useful frequencies are
almost all occupied
• Low transmission rates
• local some Mbit/s, regional currently, e.g., 53kbit/s with
GSM/GPRS or about 150 kbit/s using EDGE
• Higher delays, higher jitter
• connection setup time with GSM in the second range, several
hundred milliseconds for other wireless systems
• Lower security, simpler active attacking
• radio interface accessible for everyone, base station can be
simulated, thus attracting calls from mobile phones
• Always shared medium
• secure access mechanisms important
Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jochen H. Schiller www.jochenschiller.de MC - 2008 1.13
Early history of wireless
communication
• Many people in history used light for communication
• heliographs, flags (“semaphore”), ...
• 150 BC smoke signals for communication;
(Polybius, Greece)
• 1794, optical telegraph, Claude Chappe
• Here electromagnetic waves are
of special importance:
• 1831 Faraday demonstrates electromagnetic induction
• J. Maxwell (1831-79): theory of electromagnetic Fields, wave
equations (1864)
• H. Hertz (1857-94): demonstrates
with an experiment the wave character
of electrical transmission through space
(1888, in Karlsruhe, Germany)
2000: 2000:
analog GPRS IEEE 802.11a
2001:
IMT-2000
digital
200?:
Fourth Generation
(Internet based)
4G – fourth generation: when and how?
700
600
500
Americas
400 Europe
Japan
300 others
total
200
100
0
1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001
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 – 2008: over 3.3 billion subscribers
Middle East;
1,6
Africa; 3,1
Americas (incl.
USA/Canada); Asia Pacific;
22 36,9
Europe; 36,4
Application Application
Transport Transport
Radio Medium
Chapter 9:
Mobile Transport Layer
Chapter 8:
Mobile Network Layer
Chapter 3:
Medium Access Control
Chapter 2:
Wireless Transmission
regional
vertical
handover
metropolitan area
campus-based horizontal
handover
in-house