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Asst. Prof. Dr. Mohammad kaleem

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1 Asst. Prof. Dr. Mohammad kaleem
Mobile Networks Asst. Prof. Dr. Mohammad kaleem Computer Engineering Department, National University of Sciences and Technology, Islamabad

2 Text Book Wireless Communications and Networks, by William Stallings, Prentice Hall, 2nd Edition, 2005 This textbook will be followed for most of the course.  The material on multihop and sensor networks will be taken from research papers, and other collections.

3 Prerequisites Computer Communications And Networks
Digital Communications

4 Introduction Chapter 1

5 Wireless Comes of Age Guglielmo Marconi invented the wireless telegraph in 1896 Communication by encoding alphanumeric characters in analog signal Sent telegraphic signals across the Atlantic Ocean Communications satellites launched in 1960s Advances in wireless technology Radio, television, mobile telephone, communication satellites More recently Satellite communications, wireless networking, cellular technology, ad hoc networks, Sensor networks

6 Broadband Wireless Technology
Higher data rates obtainable with broadband wireless technology Graphics, video, audio Shares same advantages of all wireless services: convenience and reduced cost Service can be deployed faster than fixed service No cost of cable plant Service is mobile, deployed almost anywhere

7 Future Generations Fundamental Design Breakthroughs Needed
Other Tradeoffs: Rate vs. Coverage Rate vs. Delay Rate vs. Cost Rate vs. Energy Rate 802.11n 4G 802.11b WLAN 3G 2G Wimax/3G 2G Cellular Mobility Fundamental Design Breakthroughs Needed

8 Evolution of Current Systems
Wireless systems today 3G Cellular: ~ Kbps. WLANs: ~450 Mbps (and growing). Next Generation is in the works 4G Cellular: Likely OFDM/MIMO 4G WLANs: Wide open, 3G just being finalized Technology Enhancements Hardware: Better batteries. Better circuits/processors. Link: Antennas, modulation, coding, adaptivity, DSP, BW. Network: more efficient resource allocation

9 Anything above and related protocols
Application Application Transport Transport Network Network Network Network Data Link Data Link Data Link Data Link Physical Physical Physical Physical Medium Radio Scope of this course: Anything above and related protocols

10 Wireless communication systems
Target information systems: “Anytime, Anywhere, Anyform” Applications: Ubiquitous computing and information access Market in continuous growth: 35-60% annual growth of PCS (Personal Communications Services) Number of subscribers: by 2001: over 700M mobile phones by 2003: 1 billion wireless subscribers (source Ericsson) 300% growth in wireless data from Large diversity of standards and products Confusing terminology

11 Company wise Data is updated on Quarterly Basis
Mobile Subscribers in Pakistan        Customers of Mobile Service Providers in Pakistan*  Year Mobilink Ufone Paktel Instaphone Telenor Warid Total Growth Rate 2000 114,272 80,221 112,000 306,493 15.39 2001 309,272 116,711 96,623 220,000 742,606 142.29 2002 800,000 350,000 218,536 330,000 1,698,536 128.73 2003 1,115,000 550,000 319,400 420,000 2,404,400 41.56 2004 3,215,989 801,160 470,021 535,738 5,022,908 108.90 2005 7,469,085 2,579,103 924,486 454,147 835,727 508,655 12,771,203 154.26 Jul-05 Company wise Data is updated on Quarterly Basis 14,119,257 10.56 Aug -05 15,511,045 9.7 More than 15,511,045 subscribers of Cellular Networks *From Telecom Indicators section of PTA Website

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13 Limitations and Difficulties of Wireless Technologies
Wireless is convenient and less expensive Limitations and political and technical difficulties inhibit wireless technologies Lack of an industry-wide standard Device limitations E.g., small LCD on a mobile telephone can only displaying a few lines of text E.g., browsers of most mobile wireless devices use wireless markup language (WML) instead of HTML

14 Wireless around us… WLAN, DAB, GSM, etc… Personal Travel Assistant,
PDA, Laptop, GSM, cdmaOne, WLAN, Bluetooth, ...

15 Radio frequency spectrum
Wireless technologies have gradually migrated to higher frequencies

16 Wireless & Mobility Wireless: Mobility: Portability Limited bandwidth
Broadcast medium: requires multiple access schemes Variable link quality (noise, interference) High latency, higher jitter Heterogeneous air interfaces Security: easier snooping Mobility: User location may change with time Speed of mobile impacts wireless bandwidth Need mechanism for handoff Security: easier spoofing Portability Limited battery, storage, computing, and GUI

17 Challenges in Mobile Networking
Three major challenges: Wireless Channel Mobility Device Limitation

18 Part One: Background Provides preview and context for rest of book
Covers basic topics Data Communications TCP/IP

19 Chapter 2: Transmission Fundamentals
Basic overview of transmission topics Data communications concepts Includes techniques of analog and digital data transmission Channel capacity Transmission media Multiplexing

20 Chapter 3: Communication Networks
Comparison of basic communication network technologies Circuit switching Packet switching Frame relay ATM

21 Chapter 4: Protocols and the TCP/IP Protocol Suite
Protocol architecture Overview of TCP/IP Open systems interconnection (OSI) reference model Internetworking

22 Part Two: Wireless Communication Technology
Underlying technology of wireless transmission Encoding of analog and digital data for wireless transmission

23 Chapter 5: Antennas and Propagation
Principles of radio and microwave Antenna performance Wireless transmission modes Fading

24 Chapter 6: Signal Encoding Techniques
Wireless transmission Analog and digital data Analog and digital signals

25 Chapter 7: Spread Spectrum
Frequency hopping Direct sequence spread spectrum Code division multiple access (CDMA)

26 Chapter 8: Coding and Error Control
Forward error correction (FEC) Using redundancy for error detection Automatic repeat request (ARQ) techniques

27 Part Three: Wireless Networking
Examines major types of networks Satellite-based networks Cellular networks Cordless systems Fixed wireless access schemes Use of mobile IP and Wireless Access Protocol (WAP) to provide Internet and Web access

28 Chapter 9: Satellite Communications
Geostationary satellites (GEOS) Low-earth orbiting satellites (LEOS) Medium-earth orbiting satellites (MEOS) Capacity allocation

29 Chapter 10: Cellular Wireless Networks
Cellular wireless network design issues First generation analog (traditional mobile telephony service) Second generation digital cellular networks Time-division multiple access (TDMA) Code-division multiple access (CDMA) Third generation networks

30 Chapter 11: Cordless Systems and Wireless Local Loop
Wireless local loop (WLL) Sometimes called radio in the loop (RITL) or fixed wireless access (FWA)

31 Chapter 12: Mobile IP and Wireless Access Protocol
Modifications to IP protocol to accommodate wireless access to Internet Wireless Application Protocol (WAP) Provides mobile users access to telephony and information services including Internet and Web Includes wireless phones, pagers and personal digital assistants (PDAs)

32 Part Four: Wireless Local Area Networks
Examines underlying wireless LAN technology Examines standardized approaches to local wireless networking

33 Chapter 13: Wireless LAN Technology
Overview of LANs and wireless LAN technology and applications Transmission techniques of wireless LANs Spread spectrum Narrowband microwave Infrared

34 Chapter 14: IEEE 802.11 Wireless LAN Standard
Wireless LAN standards defined by IEEE committee

35 Chapter 15: Bluetooth Bluetooth is an open specification for wireless communication and networking Personal computers Mobile phones Other wireless devices

36 Internet and Web Resources
Web page for this book WilliamStallings.com/Wireless1e.html Useful web sites, errata sheet, figures, tables, slides, internet mailing list, wireless courses Computer Science Student Support Site WilliamStallings.com/StudentSupport.html Newsgroups comp.std.wireless comp.dcom.*


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