Title: Anands ISMC Power Session
1Mobile WiMAX
Roadmap for the Mobile Internet Revolution
Siavash M. Alamouti Intel Fellow, Mobility
Group CTO, Mobile Wireless Group
2Future Internet Economy OECD Policy Brief, June
2008
- The Internet now underpins a range of new
economic activities as well as activities and
infrastructures that support our economies, from
financial markets and health services to energy
and transport.
In the longer term, small wireless sensor
devices embedded in objects, equipment and
facilities are likely to be integrated with the
Internet through wireless networks that will
enable interconnectivity anywhere and at
anytime.
3Vision for Mobile Internet
Transparent Affordable Internet Access Wherever
You Are
Wi-Fi Mobile WiMAX 1st generation Mobile
Internet
WiMAX connectivity requires a WiMAX enabled
device and subscription to a WiMAX broadband
service. Availability of WiMAX is limited, check
with your carrier for details on availability.
4What is the killer application?
The Internet!
5Ingredients for Mobile Internet Success
Affordable flat-rate charge
Ubiquitous Connectivity
Low-cost/Low Power PCs
True Internet not Mini-Internets
Simple Roaming
Device Retail Model
Open and PC-like Mobile Devices
low cost modems
6Why do we need 2Mbps broadband?
- Internet is getting more complex with rich with
multi-media - Web pages getting more complex
- Avg web page size has tripled in past 5 years
- 75 HTTP requests from images, up from 20 in
03 - 90 of web pages have images today
- Video and HD are here
- Average file size on the web 10 MBytes
- Video accounts for 99 of all bytes transferred
- And they are growing in size and length 90 of
videos are 3min, up from under 1 min in 97 - Quality is degrading
- The more bandwidth, the more people benefit from
the web
Mobile Internet requires a Per-User Multi-Mbps
Connection
7Mobile Voice vs. Mobile Internet
- A network optimized for mobile voice cannot
handle high numbers of mobile Internet users - More spectrum needed for acceptable service level
- More backhaul different network architecture
required
Mobile Internet requires a technology revolution
8Mobile Internet Service Concept
- Typical ARPU for 10 Kbps mobile voice service is
50/month in the U.S./10/month in India - Internet requires a 1-5 Mbps class of service and
an monthly rate of less than 30/month in the
U.S. / 10/month in India - ? Need to provide 100-500x the service level at
1/2 the cost in the U.S. the same cost in
India!!!!
Mobile internet requires a business model
revolution
9Intel Accelerating Mobile Internet Globally
10Intel Atom Processor
Intels smallest processor built with the worlds
smallest transistors
Highest Performance in its class
Ground-up Design for CPU Chipset
Intels lowest power CPU
ATOM will revolutionize the PC industry to mass
market affordability and mobility
- HT Technology can add 200mW of power above quoted
TDP for HT SKUs when multi-threaded applications
are run. - Average power is defined as measured CPU power
whilst running BAPCo MobileMark05 Office
Productivity suite on Microsoft Windows XP for
a period of 90min at 50C . - Idle power is measured when running Windows Vista
in idle at 50C
11Intel WiMAX Products Designs
WiMAX/Wi-Fi Combo Modules
WiMAX MIDs
WiMAX Add-in Cards
Approx indication of size
Echo Peak
Baxter Peak
Dana Point
- 1st integrated Wi-Fi WiMAX module
- Highly integrated two chip solution
- Small size low power
- Baxter Peak reference design
Internal code names for projects in
development. Product names and plans are
preliminary and subject to change.
12Technology Roadmap for Mobile Internet 2.0
13OFDMA MIMOKey Enablers of Mobile Broadband
Internet
OFDMA
- Wider band of spectrum
- 1000s of carrier, sub-carriers
- Flexible allocation of resources
S1
S2
S3
MIMO
- Multiple paths
- Narrowband processing
No more debates on modulation multiple access
14Mobile Broadband Evolving to OFDM MIMO
2010
2007
Cellular 3GPP
1G Analog
2G TDMA
3G WCDMA
LTE
802.16d
Broadband Wireless - WiMAX
802.16e
802.16m
802.11a/b/g
802.11n
Wireless LAN - Wi-Fi
OFDMA MIMO New Spectrum All-IP Core
Network
15Data Rate Latency Comparisons of WiMAX and 3G
Evolution
Today
16WiMAX Direct Impact on 3G PC Modem Pricing
Wireless Notebook Modem ASP Trajectory
150
Since Intel came out with Echo Peak
2.5-3G Cellular 111 ASP
3 Chip .11N.16E
Single Chip .11N.16E
WiFi .11ABG
WiFi .11N
0
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
ABI Research, Q307 preliminary Intel
Estimates
173G Embedded Module Pricing Impact of WiMAX
ABI Research Expanding Cellular Broadband
Connectivity to the Laptop, December 3, 2007
ABI Report Cellular Modems and Mobile Broadband
Connectivity, Q2 2008
18WiMAX or LTE Same Level of Upgrade
2G, 3G Network (GSM, EV-DO, HSPA)
2G, 3G Core Network
Upgrade core network to support more IP data
traffic
New data overlay network
4G Network (WiMAX or LTE)
All IP Core
Radio Access Network (RAN) gt 90-95 of new CapEx
Core Network Equipment lt 10 of new CapEx
Both WiMAX LTE require new RAN equipment
devices. Neither is backward compatible to
3G. Both can interwork well with existing 2G, 3G
networks.
Intel estimates. Percentage varies based upon
the operators existing network.
19Mobile WiMAX 2.0 (802.16m)300 Mbps (2010/2011)
- Peak sector throughput over 300 Mbps DL (in 20
MHz) - TDD FDD support
- Multi-carrier support BW of up to 100 MHz
- Increased VoIP capacity
- Even lower link access latencies
- Enhanced coverage
- Enhanced multi-radio coexistence and
inter-technology handover - Integrated multi-hop relay
- Self-organizing base stations
- Increased mobility Up to 350 km/hr
19
Note Actual mobility throughput depends on
environmental conditions and Service Provider
provisioning. Aggregate peak sector throughput
calculated using 20 MHz for DL. FDD support in
2010
20IEEE 802.16 timelines
21IEEE 802.16m Backward Compatibility
- 802.16e/802.16m Mixed
- Operate on the same RF carrier with
same/different BW (a) - Support a mix of 16e 16m MS on same RF carrier
(c and e) - .16e MS same performance as16e BS (bc)
- .16m BS support handover of .16e MS to/from.16e
BS (b ? ? c) - .16m MS operate with .16e BS with same
performance as.16e MS (bd)
- .16m able to disable legacy support for e
WiMAX Release 2.0 (16m) will be tightly backward
compatible to release 1.0 (16e)
21
22Summary
Internet is a major driver of economic growth
globally mobile Internet is essential in
accelerating this growth
Mobile Internet requires a revolution in
technology and business case NOT an evolution of
legacy networks and services
- Mobile WiMAX is the first generation OFDMA/MIMO
based cellular mobile radio technology - its
here today leading the mobile internet revolution
OFDMA/MIMO is the radio access technology for
Mobile WiMAX and next generation mobile internet
technologies
Mobile WiMAX has a backward compatible
technology roadmap with IEEE 802.16m specified to
meet the requirements of mobile internet in 2011
India is in a special position to adopt Mobile
WiMAX (4G) today and lead the mobile internet
revolution.