Title: WiMAX
1WiMAX
- Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access
2Overview of WiMax
- Short for Worldwide Interoperability for
Microwave Access, and it also goes by the IEEE
name 802.16. - Wireless solution to metropolitan area network
(MAN). A MAN allows areas the size of cities to
be connected. - New technology that proposes to solve problems of
broadband access and WiFi access. - New WiMAX technology would provide
- The high speed of broadband service
- Wireless rather than wired access
- Road coverage like the cell phone network instead
of tiny little hotspots of WiFi
3How WiMax Works
- A WiMAX system consists of two parts
- A WiMAX tower, similar in concept to a cell-phone
tower - A single WiMAX tower can provide coverage
to a very large area -- as big as 3,000 square
miles (8,000 square km). - A WiMAX receiver - The receiver and antenna could
be a small box or PCMCIA card, or they could be
built into a laptop the way WiFi access is today.
4WiMAX Transmitting Tower
5WiMAX Equipment
Aperto Networks antenna and modem
Alvarion Base Station and Customer Premises
equipment
6A WiMAX tower station can connect directly to the
Internet using a high-bandwidth, wired
connection. It can also connect to another WiMAX
tower using a line-of-sight, microwave link. This
connection to a second tower (often referred to
as a backhaul), along with the ability of a
single tower to cover up to 3,000 square miles,
is what allows WiMAX to provide coverage to
remote rural areas.
7What Can WiMAX Do?
- WiMAX operates on the same general principles as
WiFi -- it sends data from one computer to
another via radio signals. - A computer (either a desktop or a laptop)
equipped with WiMAX would receive data from the
WiMAX transmitting station, using encrypted data
keys to prevent unauthorized users from stealing
access. - WiMAX should be able to handle up to 70 megabits
per second. It will provide at least the
equivalent of cable-modem transfer rates to each
user. - The biggest difference isn't speed it's
distance. WiMAX outdistances WiFi by miles.
WiFi's range is about 100 feet (30 m). WiMAX will
blanket a radius of 30 miles (50 km) with
wireless access.
8WiMAX can provide two forms of wireless service
- Non-line-of-sight, WiFi sort of service, where a
small antenna on your computer connects to the
tower. In this mode, WiMAX uses a lower frequency
range -- 2 GHz to 11 GHz (similar to WiFi).
Lower-wavelength transmissions are not as easily
disrupted by physical obstructions -- they are
better able to diffract, or bend, around
obstacles. - Line-of-sight service, where a fixed dish antenna
points straight at the WiMAX tower from a rooftop
or pole. The line-of-sight connection is stronger
and more stable, so it's able to send a lot of
data with fewer errors. Line-of-sight
transmissions use higher frequencies, with ranges
reaching a possible 66 GHz. At higher
frequencies, there is less interference and more
bandwidth.
9Two main applications for WiMAX
- Fixed Wireless
- Phase One Outdoor, professionally installed
antennas providing high speed service to
businesses. Also, will serve in a backhaul
role, linking WiFi hot spots to the greater
Internet. - Phase Two Introduction of indoor,
self-installable Customer Premises Equipment
(CPE). Consumers will be able to bring home a
box resembling a cable modem, plop it down
anywhere in the house and receive high speed
service. - Mobile Wireless
- Phase Three Manufacturers to integrate WiMAX
into PC Cards, laptops, and other portable
devices to enjoy high speed connectivity at home,
around town, and even while speeding down the
highway.
10- Main problems with cable and DSL technologies
- DSL can only reach about 18,000 feet (3 miles)
from the central office switchmany urban,
suburban and rural locations may not be served. - Many older cable networks havent been equipped
to provide a return channel and converting these
networks to support high-speed broadband can be
expensive. - Cost of deploying cable is a significant
deterrent to the extension of wired broadband
service in areas with low subscriber density. -
- Main problems with WiFi (802.11) access
- Hot spots are very small, so coverage is sparse.
- Current generation of proprietary wireless
systems are relatively expensive for mass
deployments because, without a standard, few
economies of scale are possible.
11WiMAX Solves these Problems and More
- Can provide service to underserved areas
- Can fill in the gaps in cable and DSL coverage
- Line of sight not required
- Provides high bandwidth
- Inherent flexibility and low cost helps to
overcome the limitations of traditional wired and
proprietary wireless technology - Privacy and encryption features are included in
802.16 standard - Standards based technology
12Benefits of Standards
- Enables economies of scale that can bring down
the cost of equipment - Without industry-wide standards, equipment
manufacturers must provide all the hardware and
software building blocks and platforms themselves - Ensures interoperability
- Ensures compatibility and interoperability of
broadband wireless access equipment - Establishes a subset of baseline features and
protocol that all compliant equipment must
satisfy- allows equipment from multiple vendors
to interoperate - Allows service providers to purchase equipment
from more than one supplier
13Drawbacks to WiMAX
- Certain conditions terrain, weather and large
buildingscan act to reduce the maximum range. - Limited underserved customer base--Approx 85 of
U.S. households can now buy broadband services
and about 70 have a choice between DSL and
cable. - Most commercial WiMAX services likely to be small
in scalemarkets limited to hard-to-reach rural
areas or city neighborhoods that arent already
hooked up for broadband. - Cost to build a nationwide network could reach 3
billion. - Scarcity of suitable airwaveslicensed airwave
frequencies are allocated by the FCClimited
availability. Unlicensed airwaves are free but
all can use themdifficult to control service
quality as other users of the same band could
cause interference.