Title: Wireless Communications Presentation 4
1 Wireless CommunicationsPresentation 4
- Review of link Equations
- Satellite Overview by Dr. Nocedal
- The Promise of WiMax
- Bridging the Digital Divide
- Project Discussions
2Link Equation for Power
3Link Equation For Noise
4Antenna Equations
5Link Equation in dB Terms
6A perspective of the Satcom Industry
- Fernando Nocedal
- Vitacom
- Stanford, Sep 30 2005
7Overview
- Market info capacity, vendors, applications
- Satellite Operators examples
- Earth Station Products
- Systems Engineering Aspects
- VSAT networks for Rural Applications
- Examples in Latin America the Vitacom experience
8Satellite Operators
- Regional
- Asiasat
- Eutelsat
- Hispasat
- Arabsat
- Palapa
- Telesat-Anik
- Satmex
- Star One (Brazil)
- China
- Korea, Thai, India.
- Global
- Intelsat
- Panamsat
- SES
- Loral
- NewSkies
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15(from Futron)
16(from Futron)
17Consolidation
- Operators
- Intelsat announced its buying Panamsat Aug 2005
- Still to be approved
- Combined company would dominate intl market (55
satellites) - Americom - GE - SES
- Larger Operators are getting larger
- Smaller Operators survivability
18- C-Band 19 active transponders, with EIRP of up
to 41 dBW.
FREQUENCY PLAN C-Band
March 2005
19Ku-Band
FREQUENY PLAN Ku Band
March 2005
20Profitability in the SATCOM Market (by Futron)
21Products for Networking
- Network Architectures
- Mesh / STAR / hybrid
- Fixed/ demand/ random access
- Applications
- Mobile services video, data, voice
- Building Blocks
- Antenna
- RF (transceiver) LNA
- Modem
- Router/encoder
22Vitacom (1)
- Started as Vitalink in 1980
- Satcom products for Data networks in the USA
- Expanded to Latin America in 1987
- Provided first private networks in Lat AM
- Shift from equipment manufacturing to service
provider mid 1990s - Teleport in Mtn View to cover LAT AM
- Products conventional scpc, plus integrated
TDMA solutions, IP applications
23Vitacom (2)
- Produces proprietary transceivers C- and Ku-Band
- Subsidiary in China (equipment only)
- Service operations in MV, Mexico and Colombia
- Main service internet via Satellite, private
nets - Main Market Latin America
- Sectors
- a) Corporate International energy, finance, mfg
- b) Education
- c) ISPs and carriers
- d) Rural comms
24Satmex 5 (116.8 W) EIRP Region KU-2 Odd
Xponder (Pol. Ver/Hor)
40
20
Latitude N (Degrees)
0
-20
-40
120
100
60
80
40
Longitude W (Degrees)
SATMEX PROPRIETARY INFORMATION
25Satmex 5 C-Band
EIRP 39 dBW SFD -92 dBW/m2 G/T -2 dB/K
26EIRP Satmex 6 C-Band
C-3 Continental EIRP 38 dBW SFD -98
dBW/m2 G/T -3.0 dB/K
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28DLSN (Puerto Rico)
- Distance Learning Saltellite Network
- Funded by No Child Left Behind project
- Provides video conferencing, internet, data
transfer and Video broadcast capabilities to 100
training centers of the Dept. of Education of PR - DLSN is geared toward training the educators and
the students - Promotes interaction between groups
- Hub facility (Linkstar TDMA platform) is in Mtn
View - Separate project in PR provides basic internet
to 1500 schools (not by Vitacom)
29DLSN (Puerto Rico) 2
- Technology used
- Satcom network by ViaSat Linkstar
- DVB-TDM outbound 7Mbps
- Several inbounds at 650kbps TDMA
- VCON video conferencing
- Separate one way video broadcast 3Mbps
- Approx 12MHz for 100 nodes, i.e. 120kHz per node
(excludes video bdcast) - Terminals 1.8m antenna, 2W BUCs, IDU, IRD, VCON
30Systems Engineering Aspects
- Modem Performance Improvements
- Higher Level modulation
- QPSK, 8PSK, 16QAM
- (bandwidth efficiency)
- High Coding gain Encoding
- (power effciency)
- Transponder Resource Mgmnt
- Optimization of satellite capacity
- C vs Ku vs Ka band
- Rain attenuation
- Terminal size
- BW cost
- coordination
-
- Antenna Size
- Small antenna reduces terminal cost but increases
recurring cost - Small antenna easy to transport and install but
reduces link availability
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33Internet via Satellite
- Thin route
- Based on Linkstar TDMA product. Ku Band
- Many combos downstream/upstream
- 128kbps/32kbps to 1Mbps/512kbps various levels of
CIR - From 80/mo to 2,000/mo
- IP applications voice, data, surfing
- Terminal cost around 2K
- BW Sizing and Costing is a major task!!
- Thick Route (backbone)
- SCPC/SCPC asymmetrical
- Cband for higher reliability
- DVB down with SCPC up
- DVB down one way (terr return)
- Typical data rates
- 256k, 512k, 2Mbps, 8Mbps
- Pricing around 2K/mo/Mbps
- Terminal Cost 10K and up
-
34Rural Internet Mexico
- e-Mexico
- 2000 nodes, phase 1 (Interdirec-Linkstar)
- Basic internet access only
- 40MHz available (20 kHz /node)
- Subsidized satellite BW
- Poor performance network saturation
- Phase 2 awarded to Telmex (Hughes technology)
- Is it self-sustainable ?
35Rural Internet Colombia
- COMPARTEL
- Various stages (4,000 nodes)
- Gilat awarded most of the initial phase
- Comsat and Andinet stage B
- Phase 2 recently out for bids
- Interesting formula
- Government grants regulatory license to winner
- Winner operates network, collects, etc
- Performance specifications need to be met
- Winner is that who requeires the smallest
subsidy
36Rural Internet
- Internet kiosks for public use
- If telephony offered on top, it adds significant
value, but demands much more BW - Cyber Café very common in Lat Am
- Use of Consumer Products in this market distorts
prices and produces disappointments - Combine Satcom WiFi to provide wider coverage
- Overall Economics
- Incumbent Telcos Reaction
37WiMax Network Projections
38Wireless Network
- Central hub supports multiple users using
multiple applications, mostly Internet and VoIP
telephony
39Assumptions
- Assume that the major differences between WiFi
and WiMax are - Software
- Power levels allowed (ERP)
- This implies that most of the hardware required
for a WiMax network will eventually be priced
comparably to that required by a WiFi network
today, with the exception of antennae and some
physical infrastructure
40More assumptions
- We will limit our analysis to the last mile
network, i.e. we assume local availability of - Power
- A high place to put the antenna
- Some high bandwidth internet access (i.e. fiber
optic, satellite ground station, WiMax Backhaul,
etc.) - Customers wanting internet service will need
computers. We do not require high performance,
however, and could easily make do with obsolete
systems, donated by industrialized nations
41Access Point
- Assuming WiMax CPE will be priced comparably to
WiFi equipment available today - Wireless router/access point
- Linksys WRTP54G-ER Wireless-G 54Mbps Broadband
Router with Earthlink VoIP Service - 39.99 - Linksys WRT54GL Wireless-G Linux Router - 59.99
- Linksys WRTP54G Wireless-G Vonage VoIP Router -
59.99 - Wireless Access Point
- Linksys WAP54G Wireless-G Access Point -
79.99 - Netgear WG602 54Mbps Wireless Access Point -
79.99 - D-Link DWL-2100AP 108Mbps Wireless Access Point
w/ SNMP AES - Price 99.99
42Local Transceiver Antennae
- Assumed to be at about 16 dB Gain
- Assumed to run in the 2.4-2.5 GHz range
- Good transmission, relatively low attenuation
- In the US , there is an amateur band at 900 MHz
2.4 GHz
43Andrews Corporation2.4-2.5GHz 17dBi Grid Ant
- 17 dBi (mid)N Male
- Die cast grid antenna is manufactured with
magnesium alloy, stainless steel and aluminum.
Weighs 33 less than aluminum antennas with no
rust. - Max Wind 140 MPH
- List106.00
- Gold68.90
44More Antennae
- 13 dBi (mid)
- N Female Flat panel 60 degree sector antenna.
Lightweight and rugged. Standard antenna mounts. - List595.00
- Gold422.45 317.63
- 14.0 dBi (mid)
- N Female Lightweight and rugged Spread
Spectrum/ISM band parabolic antenna. Mount
provides fine adjustment of azimuth and
elevation. Radome is included - List450.00
- Gold297.00
45Customer Premise Equipment- PCI Cards
- Notebook Mobile Adapters
- Netgear WN511T RangeMax Next Wireless N PC-Card
Notebook Adapter - Price 99.99 - Linksys WPC54G 54Mbps Wireless-G PC Notebook
Adapter - Price 49.99 - Buffalo CB-G54HP PC-Card AirStation High Power
Wireless Notebook Adapter - Price 49.99 - Wireless PCI Card Adapters
- Linksys WMP54GS Wireless-G PCI Card with
SpeedBooster - Price 59.99 - D-Link DWL-G510 54Mbps Wireless-G PCI Card -
19.99 - Netgear WG311 54Mbps Wireless-G PCI Adapter for
Desktop Computers - Price 39.99
46Customer Premise Equipment- VoIP Phones
- Direct-to-LAN phones
- Hitachi IP-5000 - Hitachi-Cable Wireless
IPC-5000 WiFi SIP VoIP Wireless phone 299.95 - Phones With PC Base Stations
- Grandstream GXP-2000 - 78.95
- Grandstream Budgetone GS-101 Black SIP IP Phone
37.99 - KeySpan VP-24A Cordless VoIP Phone (Skype) 66.99
47VoIP for Existing Cell phonesOne Example is
TruPhone
- TruPhone
- Software provider
- TruPhone Software makes VoIP calls from any LAN
- Requires a phone compatible with TruPhone
Software - Nokia's E-series and N-series phones
- Calling landlines in other countries from their
mobile (from US) - UK 3.2c/min
- China 3.2c
- Mexico City 3.6c
- Japan 5.5c
- Calling international mobiles(from US)
- India 18.4c/min
- UK mobiles 23.1c
- China mobiles 3.3c
- Japan mobiles 24.0c
48A sample system- A WiMax point serves N
computer/phone stations
- Linksys WRT54GL Wireless-G Linux Router (
59.99) - Andrews Grid Antenna (106.00)
- D-Link DWL-G510 54Mbps Wireless-G PCI Card -
(N19.99) - Grandstream Budgetone GS-101 Black SIP IP Phone
(N37.99) - Donated PC (0)
- Total 165.99 N57.98
- Let N 10 Stations, Total cost 745.79
49Bridging the Digital Divide
50The Digital Divide
- The differential access to computers, Internet,
telecommunications, and information in society. - Typically characterized along the variables of
income, education, race, age, ethnicity,
disability and geography.
51The Digital Divide
- Digital Divide refers to the unequal access to
knowledge, training, job opportunities, useful
digital content, practices of the information
economy, resources and so on. - The divide is not only a technological but also a
socio-economic and political problem.
52The Digital Divide
53The Digital Divide
- In the Human Resource Development report of 1999,
Kofi Annan mentioned the Digital Divide as a
source of growing inequality in the world and
committed the UN to bridge this divide. - - Nicholas Negroponte and
- UN secretary general Kofi Annan
- unveil the 100 laptop.
- (November 2005)
54The Problems
- Governance
- Literacy / Social Facilitation
- Service / Access Provision
- Content / Services
- Software Tools
- Devices
- Carriage Facilities
55The structure of the Solution
56ICT as the Solution to the Digital Divide Problem
- Most Information and Communication Technology
initiatives provide a cost effective method of
bridging the Digital Divide. - The projects are generally the combined effort of
the Government, Academia, NGO, Media, Community
and CSR and Individual initiatives.
57Key Questions
- Is bridging the Digital Divide worth the effort
and the outcome? - Can the poor and illiterate use new technologies?
58POV (What critics say)
It Stinks!
- The cost of creating a working Internet
Connection in a developing nation is the same as
that of providing immunization against 6 fatal
childhood diseases to thousands of children. - The introduction of ICT into communities
otherwise unchanged will merely heighten existing
inequalities.
59POV (What BoP consumers say)
- I used to think the Internet was just for people
working in offices, but I now realize it is also
very useful for religious leaders and their
communities. I know that many good things have
been done by Americans in Mali. Now I am
discovering that the same is true throughout the
world. With the Internet, I can find information
for the preaching I do on Fridays, and I can
help other Moslems understand whats going on in
the world. Im connected." - Imam Korobara (Mali)
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61Snippets
- Poor, rural women in Bangladesh use GSM cell
phones, despite having no prior experience with
phones of any type. Many of the Grameen Telecom
village phone entrepreneurs, despite their
illiteracy, have memorized country codes and
proudly help customers call anywhere in the
world. - Telecenters in El Salvador operated by
Infocentros provide Internet conferencing to poor
businessmen to negotiate sales of their crops.
62Snippets
- In Andhra Pradesh (India), SKS introduced Palm
Pilots with smart cards as bank passbooks and
issued them to the village womenfolk. - The promising feedback led SKS to believe it
would be able to scale up operations in the near
future.
63Snippets
- In Kenya, NairoBits is successfully training slum
teenagers to be Web page designers. - In an experiment in coastal villages in India,
local women were trained in less than a week to
use a PC to interpret real-time satellite images
of the concentration of schools of fish in the
Arabian Sea, and could successfully direct their
husbands to the right spots to catch fish.
64Snippets
- The M.S. Swaminathan Pondicherry Project,
provides info-kiosks to provide farmers with
information about agriculture. These info-kiosks
were also, rather surprisingly, used to get
information about government programs. - In Gujrat, India, automated butterfat assessment
equipment is used by the dairies, which has
radically simplified the process of evaluating
milk and paying dairy farmers.
65Reasons for Failure of ICT Projects
- Friction with Government Society.
- Financial sustainability, Cost Recovery.
- Lack of Standardization of codes.
- Unavailability of locally relevant content.
- Credibility Concerns.
- Commercial Funding.
- Impact of technical decisions.
66Case Study
67Grameen Telecom - Bangladesh
- One of the least wired counties with 97 of homes
lacking telephones. - Grameen Bank (a micro finance institution) formed
2 entities - Grameen Telecom A non profit organization which
provides phones services in rural areas as an
income generating activity for members of the
Grameen Bank. - Grameen Phone Ltd. A for profit organization
which has come to be the dominant mobile carrier
of the country.
68Grameen Telecom Business Model
- Accomplishes simultaneous generation of income
and connectivity. - GB approves financing of a phone, GT provides
cellular subscription, the connection, hardware
and training. - The initiative has a shared access business
model which creates high returns, thus keeping
the project in momentum. - Repayment rates for Grameen Bank are 90-95.
69Results and Benefits
- 213,000 village phones in 65,000 villages. (2005)
- Revenue per phone per month 93 USD. (2001)
- Secondary benefit is the employment and
enhancement of status of Women since 95 of the
phone operators are female.
70Grameen Telecom - Hurdles
- Most VP equipped villages are situated at the
outer edges of the GSM cells resulting in signal
fluctuations, dropped calls, revenue loss and
customer dissatisfaction. - Problem countered by introduction of external
High Gain Antenna, which also extends coverage
for VP operation without further investment in
network expansion. - Technologies like FWT and WLL are being
considered as other solutions for extended
coverage with good quality but set up costs are
high.
71Grameen Telecom - Hurdles
- GP is experimenting towards finding cost
effective ways (like the Mast Head Amplifier
based BTS) to increase coverage in the rural
area. - Power for charging the battery is another
problem. There are villages with network
coverage, but without electricity. The number of
such villages increases as with the distance from
Dhaka city. Solar panel and DC batteries have
been tested as alternatives.
72Grameen Telecom - Hurdles
- All the solutions of the present problems, i.e.
extended antenna, solar panel, DC battery
increases the start up cost, which is funded by
GB branch. This results in increase of weekly
installment for the operator. On the other hand,
new BTS or MHA will increase the cost on the
network operators. An optimum balance must be
found.
73In the pipeline
- Educ. AR Argentina
- TARAHaat India
- ITAFE (World Economic Forum)
- Hole in the Wall Project
- Reusable PCs
- Low Cost PCs