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Communication Networks A Second Course Jean Walrand Department of EECS University of California at Berkeley.

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Presentation on theme: "Communication Networks A Second Course Jean Walrand Department of EECS University of California at Berkeley."— Presentation transcript:

1 Communication Networks A Second Course Jean Walrand Department of EECS University of California at Berkeley

2 Administrative Details 3 Units Course Contents: Review major recent networking research ideas Provide background for these papers Get a sense of where field is heading Grade based on Class participation: Writing lecture notes: Lecture  assigned “scribe” writes notes  other students send comments on notes  revised notes Term project and its presentation: Select topic by week 6; outline by week 9; ready to present by week 12; report by week 15.

3 Contents Introduction Review of TCP/IP Moving Forward Wireless Networks Transport Incentives

4 Introduction Explain network models and analysis Focus on three active areas of research 1.Wireless: Wi-Fi, Wi-Max, MANETs, Sensors 2.QoS, Transport, Routing, Cross-Layer… 3.Incentives: Differentiation, Revenue Sharing … Along the way, we cover some useful tools Markov models Stability of nonlinear systems Duality in convex programming Game theory

5 Introduction Major developments in Internet and networks Economic value (B2B, B2C) New applications (voice, video, TV) New structures (P2P) Machine-to-machine communication Mobility support Security concerns Internet protocols over-stretched Protocols must adapt or be changed

6 Introduction Key Ideas:

7 Introduction Major research topics

8 Introduction Architecture Service Model: Best effort or richer? Compatible or “Greenfield” New layer structure for wireless, “cross-layer?” Switching and transport modes

9 Introduction Architecture: Service Specification: soft or precise? Choice and select?

10 Introduction Architecture: Layers

11 Introduction Architecture: Mode

12 Introduction Middleware Economics: Differentiation, Revenue Sharing QoS: Specified or end-to-end choice Mobility: Indirection Name  Address Security: Insurance?

13 Introduction Middleware: Differentiation

14 Introduction Middleware: QoS Specified: Premium = less than 150ms Choice: premium better than basic…

15 Introduction Middleware: Mobility Indirection (similar to cell phone)

16 Introduction Middleware: Security Insurance? To connect, you need an insurance Insurance company checks your “security” Incentive: Premium goes down if secure

17 Introduction Wireless: Sensor and Ad Hoc Application-driven or generic? Network capacity Scheduling: graph coloring Power control: strategic issues Routing: interference; short or long hops; parallel paths Transport: How to include graph constraints? Network-processing Network coding Wi-Fi VoIP+Data Capacity WiMax vs. Wi-Fi

18 Introduction Wireless: Application-Driven or Generic? Basic observation: No universally best protocols Using features of application yields better solutions Example 1: If central node can reach all sensors, it can provide synchronization, polling, etc. Example 2: Power constraints may not exist in some systems and be essential in others Keep in mind technology trends

19 Introduction Wireless: Network Capacity Random network or given network? O(.)-results or precise results? Optimal or given set of protocols? Delay-constrained or not?

20 Introduction Wireless: Scheduling Graph coloring Key issue: correct model of constraints Difficulty: Interference;Uncertainties Question: Complexity (time, communication)

21 Introduction Wireless: Power Control Strategic: In CDMA, increasing a improves rate for node but increases interference for others

22 Introduction Wireless: Routing Principle of optimality fails…. Short or long hops?

23 Introduction Wireless: Transport Constraints? Assume CDMA or TDMA?

24 Introduction Wireless: Network Processing Complexity

25 Introduction Wireless: Network Coding Worthwhile?

26 Introduction Wired Overlay pros and cons P2P incentives Transport: Control problem, strategic aspects Service differentiation: benefits Routing: BGP, QoS, Strategic aspects


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