Title: Access to the Global Internet: Which Technology Will Win?
1Access to the Global Internet Which Technology
Will Win?
For most of the world in 5 years (aside from
North America and part of Europe) Phone Cell
Phone Internet Wireless Internet
- Evolution
- 3G builds on existing networks
- Huge volumes
- Global spectrum
- Separate network
- Optimized for voice
- Old technology
- Revolution
- IP networks
- Optimized air interfaces
- Design for converged traffic
- New technology for low cost
- No global spectrum or approval
- No market momentum
- Timing?
2RadioRouter Enabling Wireless Data
- Internet mobility prospect is supercharging
Wireless Data demand
- Evolving cellular networks have a systematically
flawed data approach - 3G is spectrally inefficient and 3G data are
prohibitively expensive
- RadioRouter networks are designed specifically
for data enabling - Wireless data with wireline quality, broadband
speed and low cost - which will drive end-user adoption of wireless
data - Wireless Service Providers to maximize their
Return on Spectrum - which will drive deployment of RadioRouter
networks
3RadioRouter
- Rajiv Laroia, PhD
- laroia_at_lucent.com Phone
908-582-5409 - Head, Digital Communications Research Dept.
- Wireless Research Center
- Bell Labs
4Why RadioRouter?
- Todays cellular network is an artifact of
yesterdays constraints - RadioRouter is the result of optimizing against
todays requirements and demands to create a
highly efficient wireless data network - RadioRouter technology consists of two
fundamental innovations - Low-cost, micro-cell network that is simple to
deploy, easy to operate and low-effort to
maintain - Air-link technology that is seamless with IP
network and capable of landline quality of
service - RadioRouter will enable a new class wireless
service providers to realize the economic value
of wireless data
5Yesterdays Constraints Dictates Todays Cellular
Network
- Yesterdays constraints
- Voice traffic
- Centralized switching
- Expensive back-haul access
- High cost electronics
- Todays network architecture
- Smart (translation, expensive) basestations
with high-power, tall antennae carefully
optimized to provide large geographic coverage - Uniformly distributed, shared air-link designed
to serve a large number of low data-rate users - Expensive circuit-switched networking
6World Has Changed!
- Technology, demand and access economics have
changed - Cheaper access --- xDSL/cable
- Smaller electronics
- Data demand --- Internet
- Network requirements have changed
- Many low cost basestations connected directly to
an IP network - Lower total system cost --- reduced cost of
high-speed data - Higher capacity
- Low antenna height --- 10 feet
- Longer battery life
7RadioRouter Wireless Data Access Network
- RadioRouter IP Packet Networks
- Low-cost, micro-cell architecture - maximizing
bit/Hz/ and capacity through spatial reuse - Flash-OFDM - optimizing air-interface for packet
traffic - Autonomous basestations - Minimizing network
planning - Distributed networks - Leveraging IP to manage
data traffic and mobility - Low latency - enabling real time interactive
applications
Internet
Central Wireless Network Servers
Intranets
Packet Routing
DSLAM
PSTN
WAN IP Backbone
DSL
Circuit Switching
To IP Network
Cable Modem
To IP Network
Coax
To IP Network
To IP Network
RadioRouter Access Network
7 12 RadioRouters deployed in coverage area of
ONE Cell-Tower
8RadioRouter Is Designed for Wireless Data
- New system designed from ground up to do data
efficiently - Low cost
- Higher capacity (spatial reuse) /spectral
efficiency - Flexible, demand driven data rates
- Direct connection to IP network
- Wireline not wireless error probability
- Power efficient for long battery life
- Low latency
INTERNET
DSL
3000 PC BASE STATION
9RadioRouters Micro-Cell Innovation
- RadioRouter connects to the IP backbone via low
cost xDSL or cable modem - Mobile IP for mobility management - no expensive
switches - Dumb basestations --- sophisticated airlink
- Autonomous basestations do not require a priori
knowledge of the network nor their basestation
neighbors --- simple installation - lead to extremely scalable networks
- lower planning and maintenance cost --- enable
non-traditional service providers - Simplicity of Wireless IP RadioRouter networks
leads to lower installation and operating costs
10RadioRouters Seamless IP and Landline Interface
Innovation
- Flash OFDM uses multiple tones (400) and fast
hopping to spread signals over a 5 MHz band - Format is tolerant of both multipath and
high-speed Doppler - FDD airlink has 5MHz uplink and 5 MHz downlink
bands - OFDM has no interference between users in the
same cell and interference between users from
different cells is minimized due to use of
hopping patterns - OFDM air-interface enables 3 times higher data
rate than 3G air-interfaces - Flash OFDM permits autonomous basestations
11RadioRouter--Wireless Service Providers Best
Friend
- RadioRouters have the complexity and cost of a
Pentium with Antenna plugged directly to the
internet - Low antenna height with small cellsites 1km
radius (100 m
to 15 miles) --- airlink specifically designed
for this - Philosophy is not to maximize the capacity per
basestation but
rather to maximize the capacity per dollar spent!
INTERNET
DSL
3000 PC BASE STATION
12RadioRouter Alone Meets Wireless Data Challenge
- 3G expensive infrastructure, problems with
capacity and latency and scaling
- Ricochet low capacity ham radio
- IEEE 802.11 -local area only, inefficient
spectrally