Title: Mobile and Wireless Communication Technologies
1Mobile and Wireless Communication Technologies
Techniques
Overview of Mobile Wireless Communication
National Wireless Communications Technology
Roadmap
Trends in Communications and Media Technology,
Applications and Use
Evolution of Mobile Wireless Communication
Networks 1G to 4G
eMobility Strategic Research Agenda
Student Presentations and Research Papers
Presentations and Research Topics
http//web.uettaxila.edu.pk/CMS/SP2013/teMCTTms/
2Research Topics (Handouts for Presentations)
- National Wireless Communications Technology
Roadmap - Trends in Communications and Media Technology,
Applications and Use - Evolution of Mobile Wireless Communication
Networks 1G to 4G - eMobility Strategic Research Agenda 2008
- Multiple Access Techniques for Wireless
Communication - The Mobile Communication Society
- A Study Wireless Communication Domain
3National Wireless Communications Technology
Roadmap
- The wireless communication sector represents one
of the most important arenas of research and
expansion in Malaysia. The last two decades has
been considered to be the era of wireless
communications being led by two major trends the
outburst of wireless multiple access
communications, offering mobility to the
telephone users and the mobile multimedia. The
increasing number of mobile teleco subscribers
cause great concern to the research community and
they are in the process of finding solutions to
accommodate these customers.
4National Wireless Communications Technology
Roadmap
- The National Wireless Communications Technology
Roadmap serves as the basis to drive the national
centers of excellence (CoEs) in the area of
concern. - The CoEs will be established based on the
expertise available at RD organization. - Moreover, the roadmap will serve as a guide to
the Ministry of Science, Technology and
Innovation (MOSTI) for approving research
proposals seeking scientific and technical grants.
5National Wireless Communications Technology
Roadmap
- The roadmap could serve as the basis to drive a
concerted effort in RD activities in wireless
communications nationwide - As mentioned earlier, to be at the cutting edge
of wireless technologies and hence, to excel in
those areas, it is quintessential to identify the
latest technology trends and challenges. - Hence, it is necessary to keep this roadmap very
much alive by updating it on a regular basis.
6National Wireless Communications Technology
Roadmap
- This roadmap will provide insights to the local
academics and the researchers to work on
technologies of the future. - The collective belief is that this roadmap will
serve as a useful tool for carrying out RD in
wireless communications technologies, based on
trends and challenges, to enable Malaysia to be
at par with other developing countries.
7Trends in Communications and Media Technology,
Applications and Use
- Trends in Communications and Media Technology,
Applications and Use provides an overview of
infrastructure, applications, social and economic
trends developments, and anticipated
developments over the next five to ten years. - The report focuses on developments since the
release of Top Six Trends in Communications and
Media Technologies, Applications and Services
Possible Implications, in May 2008. Some
continuity is provided through references to
incremental advances in trends and developments
identified previously.
8Trends in Communications and Media Technology,
Applications and Use
- This report includes recent developments and
expectations in technologies, applications and
use that were introduced in the May 2008 report,
such as spectrum sharing, deep packet inspection,
the semantic web and social web. - While the primary focus of this report is on
technology, a section on the social and economic
implications of technology developments has been
added. This new section recognises that the
social and economic use of technology also
enables innovation and change.
9Trends in Communications and Media Technology,
Applications and Use
- This overview section also provides a high-level
outline of potential regulatory issues arising
from developments in technology and use. - The views set out in this report are not put
forward as predictions and there is no attempt to
pick technology winners or losers. The report
contributes to work ACMA is undertaking to inform
its understanding of the operation of regulation
in the communications and media markets and as
part of its statutory responsibilities to be
informed and advise on technology developments
and service trends.
10Trends in Communications and Media Technology,
Applications and Use
- It offers an opportunity to identify and engage
with change, and to anticipate the need for
possible action by ACMA. - Research was conducted using desktop analysis
over the period April to November 2008, focusing
on developments of significance reported over the
period. ACMA will continue to update this report
regularly and welcomes your feedback.
http//www.acma.gov.au/WEB/STANDARD/pcPC_311145
11Evolution of Mobile Wireless Communication
Networks 1G to 4G
- The last few years have witnessed a phenomenal
growth in the wireless industry, both in terms of
mobile technology and its subscribers. There has
been a clear shift from fixed to mobile cellular
telephony, especially since the turn of the
century. - By the end of 2010, there were over four times
more mobile cellular subscriptions than fixed
telephone lines (see Fig. 1).
12Evolution of Mobile Wireless Communication
Networks 1G to 4G
- Both the mobile network operators and vendors
have felt the importance of efficient networks
with equally efficient design. - This resulted in Network Planning and
optimization related services coming in to sharp
focus 1, 7. - With all the technological advances, and the
simultaneous existence of the 2G, 2.5G and 3G
networks, the impact of services on network
efficiency have become even more critical.
13Evolution of Mobile Wireless Communication
Networks 1G to 4G
- Many more designing scenarios have developed with
not only 2G networks but also with the evolution
of 2G to 2.5G or even to 3G networks. Along with
this, inter-operability of the networks has to be
considered 2. - 1G refers to analog cellular technologies it
became available in the 1980s. 2G denotes initial
digital systems, introducing services such as
short messaging and lower speed data.
14Evolution of Mobile Wireless Communication
Networks 1G to 4G
- CDMA2000 1xRTT and GSM are the primary 2G
technologies, although CDMA2000 1xRTT is
sometimes called a 3G technology because it meets
the 144 kbps mobile throughput requirement. EDGE,
however, also meets this requirement. 2G
technologies became available in the 1990s. 3G
requirements were specified by the ITU as part of
the International Mobile Telephone 2000
(IMT-2000) project, for which digital networks
had to provide 144 kbps of throughput at mobile
speeds, 384 kbps at pedestrian speeds, and 2 Mbps
in indoor environments.
15Evolution of Mobile Wireless Communication
Networks 1G to 4G
- UMTS-HSPA and CDMA2000 EV-DO are the primary 3G
technologies, although recently WiMAX was also
designated as an official 3G technology. 3G
technologies began to be deployed last decade.
16eMobility Strategic Research Agenda 2008
- By the year 2020, mobile and wireless comm. will
play a central role in all aspects of European
citizens lives, not just telephony, and will be
a major influence on European economy, wirelessly
enabling every conceivable business endeavor and
personal lifestyle. Following sentence
articulates the essence of the future aims and
vision The improvement of the individual's
quality of life, achieved through the
availability of an environment for instant
provision and access to meaningful, multi-sensory
information and content.
17eMobility Strategic Research Agenda 2008
- Realization of this vision demands a major shift
from the current concept of anywhere, anytime
to a new paradigm of any network, any device,
with relevant content and context in a secure and
trustworthy manner. - The future systems will be complex, consisting of
a multitude of service and network types ranging
across Wireless Sensor Networks (WSN), Personal
Area, Local Area, Home Networks, Moving Networks
to Wide Area Cellular Networks.
18eMobility Strategic Research Agenda 2008
- The increasing dependency of society on such
communication infrastructure requires
considerations of new applications and
requirements into their design as well as new
research methodology to realize them. - Research methodology proposed here is based on
Europes unique strength and approach to research
and development of telecommunication systems. It
is captured in a new concept called SET Concept
that underscores the need for a 3-dimensional
vision of research activities that will deliver
Simplicity, Efficiency and Trust.
19eMobility Strategic Research Agenda 2008
- It will strongly advocate integrated research
and end-to-end solutions. The Simplicity is
to enable simple use of services, service
deployment and enhancement and simple and
self-optimizing operations, maintenance and
upgrades. The Efficiency emphasizes on
efficient use of networks all types of resources
and more importantly the energy efficiency
contributing towards a greener environment,
whereas the Trust considers the new
requirements and needs of modern societal
dependency on use and full availability of such
systems in carrying out their daily lives with
robust security and resilience in face of variety
of natural and man-made disasters.
20eMobility Strategic Research Agenda 2008
- Several strategically important technologies and
non-technical barriers have been identified and
justifications provided for their considerations
into future national and European research
programs. The technological related chapters are
complemented with further work on Flexible
business infrastructures, demonstrating
different business models and business interfaces
that are envisaged in future.
21Multiple Access Techniques for Wireless
Communication
- In wireless communications systems, it is often
desirable to allow the subscriber to send
simultaneously information to the base station
while receiving information from the base
station. For example, in conventional telephone
systems, it is possible to talk and listen
simultaneously, and this effect, called
duplexing, is generally required in wireless
telephone systems. - Duplexing may be done using frequency or time
domain techniques.
22Multiple Access Techniques for Wireless
Communication
- Frequency division duplexing (FDD) provides two
distinct bands of frequencies for every user. The
forward band provides traffic from the base
station to the mobile, and the reverse band
provides traffic from the mobile to the base
station. In FDD, any duplex channel actually
consists of two simplex channels (a forward and
reverse), and a device called a duplexer is used
inside each subscriber unit and base station to
allow simultaneous bidirectional radio
transmission and reception for both the
subscriber unit and the base station on the
duplex channel pair.
23Multiple Access Techniques for Wireless
Communication
- The frequency separation between each forward and
reverse channel is constant throughout the
system, regardless of the particular channel
being used. - Time division duplexing (TDD) uses time instead
of frequency to provide both a forward and
reverse link. In TDD, multiple users share a
single radio channel by taking turns in the time
domain. Individual users are allowed to access
the channel in assigned time slots, and each
duplex channel has both a forward time slot and a
reverse time slot to facilitate bidirectional
communication.
24Multiple Access Techniques for Wireless
Communication
- If the time separation between the forward and
reverse time slot is small, then the transmission
and reception of data appears simultaneous to the
users at both the subscriber unit and on the base
station side. - TDD allows communication on a single channel (as
opposed to requiring two separate simplex or
dedicated channels) and simplifies the subscriber
equipment since a duplexer is not required.
25The Mobile Communication Society A cross -
cultural analysis of available evidenceon the
social uses o f wireless communication technology
- Wireless communication technology is diffusing
around the planet faster than any other
communication technology to date. Because
communication is at the heart of human activity
in all domains, the advent of this technology,
allowing multimodal communication from anywhere
to anywhere where there is the appropriate
infrastructure, is supposed to have profound
social effects.
26The Mobile Communication Society A cross -
cultural analysis of available evidenceon the
social uses o f wireless communication technology
- Yet, which kind of effects, under which
conditions, for whom and for what is an open
question. - Indeed, we know from the history of technology,
including the history of the Internet, that
people and organizations end up using the
technology for purposes very different of those
initially sought or conceived by the designers of
the technology. - Furthermore, the more a technology is
interactive, and the more it is likely that the
users become the producers of the technology in
its actual practice.
27The Mobile Communication Society A cross -
cultural analysis of available evidenceon the
social uses o f wireless communication technology
- Therefore, rather than projecting dreams and
fears on the kind of society that will result in
the future from the widespread use of wireless
communication, we must root ourselves in the
observation of the present using the traditional,
standard tools of scholarly research. People,
institutions, and business have suffered enough
from the unwarranted prophecies of futurologists
and visionaries that project and promise whatever
comes to their minds on the basis of anecdotal
observation and ill understood developments.
28The Mobile Communication Society A cross -
cultural analysis of available evidenceon the
social uses o f wireless communication technology
- Thus, our aim in this report is to ground an
informed discussion of the social uses and social
effects of wireless communication technology on
what we know currently (2004) in different areas
of the world. We would have like to consider
exclusively information and analyses produced
within the rigorous standards of academic
research. This constitutes a good proportion of
the material examined here. However, because of
the novelty of the phenomenon and the slow motion
of traditional academic research to uncover new
fields of inquiry, the stock of contrasted
knowledge on this subject is too limited to grasp
empirically the emerging trends that are
transforming communicative practices.
29A Study Wireless Communication Domain
- Virtually every electronic device designed and
manufactured today, whether be a domestic,
medical, consumer, industrial or military
product, is an embedded system. Complexity in
design varies from low, with a single
microcontroller chip, to very high with multiple
units, peripherals and networks 1,2. - In such a scenario wireless connectivity is one
of the solutions that offers good amount of
freedom and convenience. Short Range Wireless
Systems are specialized programmable systems that
are part of a larger system or a machine.
30A Study Wireless Communication Domain
- This paper provides on overview of the
Communication Techniques for Short Range Wireless
Systems technologies that could be used with
embedded systems for inter-device connectivity.
31Instructions for Researchers and Presenters
- Each group will give a presentation on selected
topic for 60 minutes (each student for 20
minutes) - There will be a 15 minute Question and Answer
session (5 minutes after each group members
presentation) - MS Fulltime Students will be required to write a
research paper on their topic of presentation on
the IEEE conference proceedings paper pattern
template provided for them. - All PhD Students will be required to write a
research paper on their topic of presentation on
the journal proceedings pattern template provided
for them. - MS Part time Students will be tested on their
presentations by Viva Voca and/or Quiz. (This can
be waved off if these students are willing to
follow the MS Fulltime Students option instead of
Viva/Quiz. - Groups are assigned on first-come-first-serve
basis as given in the following slides.
32Student Presentations and Research Papers (Group
Members List)
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33Student Presentations and Research Papers (Group
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34Student Presentations and Research Papers (Group
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35Student Presentations and Research Papers (Group
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36Student Presentations and Research Papers (Group
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37Student Presentations and Research Papers (Group
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38Q A