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ICT Technology

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ISM Bands are kept free for Industrial, Scientific, and Medical Applications, e.g., 2.4 GHz ... Is licensed spectrum better (cleaner, scalable, etc. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ICT Technology


1
ICT Technology Issues and Opportunities
  • Prof. Rahul Tongia
  • School of Computer Science
  • CMU
  • 17-899 Fall 2003

2
Topics
  • Trends in Technology
  • Time to update the adage Cheaper, Faster, Better
    pick any 2?
  • Internet and Telecommunications
  • Primer
  • How it works (or doesnt)
  • Wireless
  • 802.11 Introduction only
  • Spectrum and other issues

3
ICT To Black Box or Not?
  • We can cannot cover everything in this one class
    (even semester!). . .
  • . . .But the much of the technological issues are
    not that hard despite some people wanting to
    pretend they are.
  • With a little effort, the important details can
    be extracted

4
Requirements for Successful Service
Will it inter-operate?
Can it be built?
Technology
Standards
Market
Regulation
Will it sell?
Is it allowed?
5
Industry Society Penetration Rates
Years to reach 50M users
Source Morgan Stanley
6
The Heart of the Matter The Growth of Computers
7
Storage Performance
8
Optical Fiber Promise Performance
Bell Labs
Gilders Law Optical speeds doubling in 9
months
9
Software Challenges in Intelligent Data Processing
10
Comparative Statistics
CAIDA (2002)
11
What Makes the Internet tick?
  • The Internet runs on 3 things
  • Boundaries
  • Limits of Responsibilities
  • Inside the core, is like a black box (The
    Cloud)
  • Standards (protocols) for data-centric design
  • Expectations of how things should work together
  • Layering
  • Robustness Principle
  • "Be liberal in what you accept, and conservative
    in what you send. Jon Postel
  • Resiliency distributed architecture
  • Limits Monopolies
  • NO ONE OWNS THE INTERNET
  • Trust
  • Addressing schemes and registration
  • End-to-end design

12
What is the Internet?
a.k.a. Backbone Providers
  • The global (public) network built from hundreds
    and thousands of internetworking independent
    networks.
  • No single entity runs the Internet
  • Operates on standards
  • Built on a modified hierarchical structure
  • Packet Switching

Tier 1
Tier 2
Users
  • There are often more layers
  • There can be interconnections other than at a
    backbone

13
Structures of the Industry
  • Government Dept.
  • Government company (PTT)
  • PTT Abbreviation for postal, telegraph, and
    telephone (organization). In countries having
    nationalized services, the organization, usually
    a governmental department, which acts as its
    nation's common carrier.
  • Regulated Monopoly
  • Competition
  • IXC Inter Exchange Carriers
  • ILECs Incumbent Local Exchange Carriers (Baby
    Bells)
  • CLECs Competitive Local Exchange Carriers
  • Overbuilders
  • Unbundled Network Elements (Open Access)

14
Call Completion / Transaction Charges
  • Mail postage stamp mechanism
  • Telephony cost sharing mechanisms (vary)
  • Internet?
  • What are the costs?
  • Calling sharp falls over time
  • Mailing increasing over time
  • Faxing not going away anytime soon
  • Email
  • Is it really free?
  • Access
  • Upstream TCO (ignoring SPAM, for now!)
  • Time

15
Peering Internet Call Completion
  • Where backbones come together
  • Major design issue (relates to cross-connection)
  • Public Peering fallout of the public history of
    the Internet
  • Network Access Points (NAPs)
  • Started with 4, but now there are more
  • Usually done by equals
  • Give as much traffic as receive
  • Private Peering
  • Commercial (private)
  • International peering is more limited (links are
    much more expensive)

16
TCP/IP
  • Suite of protocols for networking
  • Based on logical address for devices
  • Most popular standard worldwide built into most
    OS
  • Like most other packet switching, is
  • Connectionless
  • Statistical (non-deterministic)
  • No inherent Quality of Service (QoS)
  • Most of IP routing is unicast
  • Routers pass packets along towards the
    destination hop-by-hop

17
Internet Good for what it was made for
  • Best-effort data network
  • Scalable
  • Resilient
  • New trend Everything over IP (XoIP)
  • Voice Circuit switched
  • Less than half the traffic
  • Growth of 25 vs 100 (?) for data
  • But, is most of the revenue for carriers
  • Suppliers killer app
  • For users, email and WWW are the killer apps
    (legal, anyways)
  • Internet Telephony is not the same as VoIP
  • Latency example
  • Berkeley CMU IP-based lectures!

18
Applications vs. Networking Parameters
19
Internet is built on trust
  • Registration (databases) are believed because
    people think they are correct
  • Domain Name System
  • Handles names for humans vs. binary for machines
  • Root names are the last .xxx, e.g., .com, .edu,
    .org, .mil, .ca, .tv
  • Just 13 root servers in the world
  • Many copies made for practical purposes
  • Borders define responsibilities

20
Standards and Regulation
  • Many bodies, sometimes with overlap
  • IETF (within IAB) handles the engineering of the
    network
  • W3C handles web standards such as html, xml, etc.
  • IEEE handles some standards
  • Requests for Comments (RFCs) are how things get
    standardized
  • Draft is circulated
  • Modified, debated, etc. (many versions often)
  • Becomes a standard by vote.
  • Companies often try and tilt emerging standards

21
Registries and Domain Names
  • Numeric address space is coordinated
  • Domain Names initially managed by ISI (Jon
    Postel)
  • National Science Foundation (NSF) hired
    contractor to administer
  • Network Solutions, Inc. (NSI) under InterNIC
  • NSF stopped paying NSI, allowed NSI to charge for
    .com, .net, .org
  • 70 for two years
  • NSI becomes enormously profitable

Based on information from Jon Peha and Gary
Kessler
22
Domain Names (cont.)
  • NSF responsibilities passed to Commerce Dept.
  • The US government controlled key element of the
    Internet (!) so
  • NSF establishes ICANN (Internet Corporation for
    Assigned Names and Numbers) in 1998
  • Has many critics
  • Registration became competitive by 1999
  • Registry manage database, NSI monopoly
  • Registrar consumer interface, competition
  • IP address space (numeric) is still from regional
    authorities

23
Spectrum
  • Frequency affects
  • Capacity Bandwidth
  • Range
  • Interference and Line of Sight Requirements
  • Protocols and Technology
  • ISM Bands are kept free for Industrial,
    Scientific, and Medical Applications, e.g., 2.4
    GHz

24
Special Properties of Spectrum
  • Heavily controlled
  • Military uses
  • Licensed use
  • Source of licensing fees
  • Is a public good everywhere yet not limitless
  • Many forms are appropriate for point to
    multipoint (including broadcast)
  • Encoding is key bits per hertz

25
Spectrum Issues
  • 802.11 Alphabet Soup
  • a, b, g, i, etc. Differ in
  • Data Rates
  • Bands
  • Compatibility
  • Distance
  • Is licensed spectrum better (cleaner, scalable,
    etc.)?
  • 3G licenses have gone for thousands of dollars
    per potential subscriber
  • Cognitive Radios might be the future

26
Hypothetical WiFi Kiosk
  • Access Points are now about 100 (only!)
  • What else does it take?
  • What range does it cover?
  • Number of Users
  • Band overlaps and congestion
  • FCC vs. ETSI regulations on emissions
  • Uplinking
  • IP address space
  • Now What Syndrome need user h/w, s/w, etc.
  • Business Plan ?
  • Capex is less than half of broadband costs

27
ICT Issues
  • Policy
  • Convergence
  • Open Access
  • Universal Service / Digital Divide
  • Globalization
  • Winner Takes All
  • Internet
  • Is it special (Information Service vs. Telecom
    Service)?
  • Jurisdiction
  • Taxation

28
Issues in the Internet
  • Scalability
  • Internet is growing at 100-300
  • Running out of IP addresses esp. LDCs
  • Long term solution IPv6
  • 128 bit addresses (millions per square meter)
  • Protocols and equipment are straining
  • Security
  • Distributed Denial of Service example of an
    attack
  • Viruses
  • Spam
  • Privacy
  • Quality of Service
  • Voice
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