Submission doc.: IEEE 11-12/493r0 May, 2012 Richard Edgar, et alSlide 1 6-10GHz_extensions_to_802.11ac_part4 Date: 2012-05-14 Authors:

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Doc.: IEEE /655r0 Submission May 2006 Slide 1Scott Lee, et al., Samsung Electronics Use Cases of WLAN for AV Streams Scott Seongwook Lee, Huai-Rong.
Advertisements

P-660HWP Network access market, for home and small business usersVersatile Internet access device for easy deploymentHigh speed network access and communicationCentral.
Doc.: IEEE /1464r0 Submission November 2011 Yasuhiko Inoue (NTT), et. al.Slide 1 The better spectrum utilization for the future WLAN standardization.
D-LINK HQ –Yilin Chen Dec 3 th, 2012 Sales Guide v1.00.
Doc.: IEEE /1510r0 Submission November 2014 Edward Au (Marvell Semiconductor)Slide 1 Summary of PAR and CSD Discussion Date: Authors:
ECGR-6185 ZIGBEE Advanced Embedded Systems University of North Carolina –Charlotte Gajendra Singh Some figures borrowed from Zigbee Alliance web pages.
Beyond ad – Ultra High Capacity and Throughput WLAN 2nd presentation
D-LINK HQ -WRPD Apr 10 th, 2012 Sales Guide v1.00.
Doc.:IEEE /1159r1 Submission Laurent Cariou Sept, 2010 Slide 1 Non contiguous additional bandwidth mode Date:
Doc.: IEEE /491r2 SubmissionL. Cariou, Orange Labs Date: Fast Session Transfer May 2010 L. Cariou, Orange LabsSlide 1 Authors:
© NETGEAR ®. All rights reserved PTV Push2TV TV adapter for Intel® Wireless Display.
Doc.: IEEE /1126r0 Submission September 2012 Krishna Sayana, SamsungSlide 1 Wi-Fi for Hotspot Deployments and Cellular Offload Date:
Doc.: IEEE /0848r0 Submission January 2008 Gal Basson (Wilocity)Slide Wireless LAN user experience Date: Authors:
INTRODUCTION Wireless communication technology Provide high speed internet to large geographical areas Part of 4 th generation(4G) Alternative to cable.
ZigBee.
Submission doc.: IEEE 11-14/0026r1 January 2014 Yong Liu, et al.Slide 1 Thoughts on HEW PAR Date: Authors:
May 2011 doc.: IEEE wng0 SubmissionSamsung Electronics, SNU Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPANs)
Emerging Wireless Standards Understanding the Role of IEEE & ZigBee™ in AMR & Submetering Mapping Your Future: From Data to Value AMRA 2003 International.
Submission doc.: IEEE 11-13/0534r1 May 2013 HanGyu Cho, LG ElectronicsSlide 1 Direction and Use Cases for HEW Date: Authors:
Doc.: IEEE /1268r0 Submission November 2010 Minyoung Park, Intel Corp.Slide 1 Low Power Consumption Opportunity in Sub 1 GHz Date:
New Antenna Technology for Next Generation Wireless Mobile Devices Al Petrick September 1, 2009.
Submission doc.: IEEE 11-14/0114r0 January, 2014 James Gilb, TensorcomSlide 1 Requirements for Next Generation mmWave Systems Date: Authors:
WiMAX, meaning Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access Emerging technology that provides wireless transmission of data using a variety of transmission.
Home Gateway Initiative Vision Brian Levy Vice Chairman April 2005.
Submission doc.: /0929r00 Jim Lansford(CSR), et al Slide 1 Expansion of ac to 6-10GHz Date: Authors: July 2012.
Submission doc.: IEEE /0830r0 July 2015 Solomon Trainin et al, IntelSlide 1 Docking usage model Date: 11-Jul-15 Authors:
(Ultra low power connectivity for small devices) By: Parthesha K.N. 8 th semester I T S I T, Tumkur.
Doc.: IEEE /0795r0 Submission HEW Usage Scenarios Categorization July 2013 Eldad Perahia (Intel)Slide 1 Date: Authors:
Doc.: IEEE /0498r0 Submission April 2008 Eldad Perahia, Intel CorporationSlide 1 Modifications to the 60GHz PAR & 5 C’s Proposal Date:
doc.: IEEE r0 Submission March 2000 Rick Alfvin, Eastman Kodak CompanySlide 1 Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal Area.
Doc.:IEEE /1050r0 Submission September 23, 2009 Samsung Slide 1 Possible Technologies for TGac Mobile Device Support Authors: Date:
Doc.: IEEE /0065r0 Submission January 2014 William Carney, SONYSlide 1 Comments on Draft HEW PAR Date: Authors:
Submission doc.: IEEE /0081r0 October 2015 Alaa Mourad, BMW GroupSlide 1 Wireless Coexistence in the Automotive Environment – System Model Date:
Doc.:IEEE /086r1March 2000 Submission Walt Davis, Motorola Slide 1 Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPANs)
Submission doc: IEEE SGAP3a-02/119r0March 2002 Domenico Porcino, Philips + Gadi Shor, Wisair Slide 1 Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless.
Doc.: IEEE c Submission Philips May, 2006 Slide 1 Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPANs)
Doc.: IEEE /137r0 Submission March, 2002 Jim Meyer, Time Domain CorporationSlide 1 Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal Area.
May 2011 doc.: IEEE wng0 SubmissionSamsung Electronics, SNU Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPANs)
Doc.: IEEE r0 Submission November 2002 Pratik Mehta Slide 1 Next Generation WLAN Standard Pratik Mehta.
Tutorial. Month Year Copyright 2003 The ZigBee Alliance, Inc. 2 Mission Statement ZigBee Alliance members are defining global standards for reliable,
Doc.: IEEE /047r0 Submission Jan 2002 Mary DuVal, Texas InstrumentsSlide 1 Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal Area Networks.
WiMAX Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access AMIT KUMAR AMIT KUMAR M TECH (ECE) M TECH (ECE)
Doc:IEEE /0150r0 Submission May 2000 Carlos Rios, 3Com Proposed Application: Wireless Home Networks.
“A TECHNOLOGY WHICH MAY OVERWRITE BLUETOOTH” BY V.BHEEM REDDY BTech(CSE) 07K91A0511.
Doc.: IEEE / Submission March 2013 Juho Pirskanen, Renesas Mobile CorporationSlide 1 Discussion On Basic Technical Aspects for HEW Date:
Doc.: IEEE /0341r2 Submission March 2011 MediaTek, Inc Slide 1 Usage Cases for ah Date: Authors:
May 2011doc.: IEEE 15-XX-XXXX-XX-Xpsc SubmissionSamsung Electronics, ETRI Project: IEEE P Working Group for Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPANs)
Submission doc.: IEEE /1158r0 September 2013 William Carney (SONY)Slide 1 Video Traffic and Applications for HEW Date: Authors:
History of Windows Operating System. Windows 1.0 Debuted in 1985 First version of Windows that was set up to use bitmap displays and mouse pointing devices.
Doc.: IEEE /0105r0 Submission January 16, 2007 Todor Cooklev, Hitachi America Ltd.Slide 1 Requirements towards video over Date: Authors:
Expanding Performance and Possibilities with n February 15, 2006.
ZigBee
Submission doc.: IEEE /1064r0 September 2015 Jarkko Kneckt, NokiaSlide 1 Long Range, Low Power Design Criteria Date: Authors:
Retail File Prices, promotions, specifications, availability and terms of offers may change without notice. Despite our best efforts, a small.
Doc.: IEEE /0778r0 Submission Zhendong Luo, CATR July MHz PHY Transmission Date: Authors: Slide 1.
“ZIGBEE” BY: A.RAKESH (08B81A0472).
160 MHz PHY Transmission Date: Authors: March 2010
VHT60 Tutorial Date: Authors: July 2008 April 2007
Multi-AP Enhancement and Multi-Band Operations
6-10GHz Rate-Range and Link Budget
Submission Title: Usage Models for Personal Space Communications
Non contiguous additional bandwidth mode
Technology and Use Cases for TGac
VHT60 Tutorial Date: Authors: July 2008 April 2007
Multi-AP Enhancement and Multi-Band Operations
120 MHz PHY Transmission Date: Authors: January 2010
doc.: IEEE <doc#>
WLAN Overlay with 60 GHz Channels
Interest for HDR extension to a
Presentation transcript:

Submission doc.: IEEE 11-12/493r0 May, 2012 Richard Edgar, et alSlide GHz_extensions_to_802.11ac_part4 Date: Authors:

Submission doc.: IEEE 11-12/493r0 May, 2012 Richard Edgar, et alSlide 2 Abstract This document discusses some of the market opportunities of using existing shared spectrum allocation in GHz as an extension frequency band for an ac PHY with a 500MHz bandwidth. It is a follow up to document 12/375r0, 12/0096r0, 11/743r0, and 11/385r1

Submission doc.: IEEE 11-12/493r0 Introduction Previous presentations on using 6-10GHz spectrum for WLAN have focussed on the Technical aspects But Standards development is more than just Technical Feasibility, it also includes analysis of the Market Demand This presentation aims to start an initial analysis of some of the market Demand Slide 3Richard Edgar, et al May, 2012

Submission doc.: IEEE 11-12/493r ac Market Projection Market for ac products expected to exceed 2130m units by ac n is expected to be the dominant technology for Wi-Fi Over 90% of WLAN enabled devices will support ac by 2016 May, 2012 Richard Edgar, et alSlide 4 Source: ABI August 2011 WI-FI Chipset Evolution From n to ac and ad Units, millions

Submission doc.: IEEE 11-12/493r0 Market Size By Segment Market Segment Cellular handset Media Tablets MIDs Portable Game Console Portable Media Player Digital Imaging Device PC Accessory Adapters Set-top Box Flat Panel TVs Blu-ray, PVRs, Media Players, Game Console Other Embedded Access Point Desktop Laptop Netbook Total (millions, units) Slide 5 Richard Edgar, et al May, 2012 Embedded Mobile Market 2016 = m units 55% of total WLAN market CAGR of 15% } } } Embedded Non Mobile Market 2016 = 543m units 24% of total WLAN market CAGR of 23% PC / Networking Market 2016 = 481.9m units 21% of total WLAN market CAGR of 8% Source: ABI August 2011 WI-FI Chipset Evolution From n to ac and ad Embedded WLAN = 79 % of total WLAN market by 2016

Submission doc.: IEEE 11-12/493r0 Key Requirements for Embedded Mobile Devices Small Solution SizeRestricted size of mobile devices requires small solution size Low Current ConsumptionRestricted battery size of mobile devices requires low power consumption Low Solution CostMobile devices targeted at the consumer market so have to meet consumer price points to achieve large volumes “Easy” software integrationSoftware integration is the long-haul part of embedded device development. Developers want to build on existing technologies where possible AdoptionConsumer devices require large-scale adoption of technologies to enable eco-system to develop Ease-of-useTechnologies must be “granny-proof” Slide 6Richard Edgar, et al May, 2012

Submission doc.: IEEE 11-12/493r0 Page 7 Wireless Technologies – Embedded Devices Suitability Technology Size Current Consumption Cost Software Integration Adoption Ease of Use ac WiGig / ad  ? Wireless HD  ? WHDI ?  ? UWB  ?  6-10GHz WLAN ? May, 2012 Richard Edgar, et al

Submission doc.: IEEE 11-12/493r0 Use Case - Wireless Docking Simultaneous internet and wireless docking with wireless display Office / Desktop (6-10GHz) Meeting room (6-10GHz) Home /Entertainment (6-10GHz) Optional wireless keyboard/mouse (6-10GHz) Internet access (11ac) Optional wireless charging May, 2012 Page 8 Richard Edgar, et al

Submission doc.: IEEE 11-12/493r0 Page 9 Wireless Docking Requirements for Success Wireless docking similar to that demonstrated on UWB radio But use ac Wi-Fi radio with 6-10GHz additional capacity Key features: Low latency Mouse movements, typing Scrolling Video conferencing Lossless transmission Graphics and text Low power Radio optimisations Optimise compression/data rate Simultaneous internet access with wireless display May, 2012 Richard Edgar, et al

Submission doc.: IEEE 11-12/493r0 Page 10 Wireless Display Technologies Wide range of initiatives addressing “wireless display” DLNA Wireless HD WFA Wi-Fi Display Intel WiDi IEEE ad / WiGig IEEE aa WHDI These developments are aimed at a single use-case: video streaming around the home Either they don’t address graphics-intensive office or gaming applications Or they aren’t designed with mobile devices in mind can add significant value to customers and end-users by supporting a wide range of use cases at mobile power levels Normal “desktop” applications such as web browsing, spreadsheets, presentations, document editing and review May, 2012 Richard Edgar, et al

Submission doc.: IEEE 11-12/493r0 Page 11 Wireless Display Technologies StandardDescriptionWireless Docking Suitability Digital Living Network Alliance Service discovery and compressed video streaming over home network Lossy compression of video data – high power, poor graphics & text, high latency Wireless HD60GHz Video area network; lossless FullHD video streaming at up to 10m First generation products available, low latency but high power WFA Wi-Fi DisplayVideo and audio transport using MPEG over TCP/IP/ Lossy compression of video data – high power, poor graphics & text, high latency IEEE aa“Robust Audio Video Transport Streaming” - changes to MAC: better multicast, alternate AC & OBSS Complementary technology WiGig / IEEE ad 60GHz Wi-Fi, standards development in progress Many unknowns: power, antennas, beamsteering, chip design & operation, industrial design will all slow adoption WHDI™ (Wireless Home Digital Interface) High-quality, light compression Full HD video wireless delivery for homes; 5GHz radio similar to n using 40MHz channels with proprietary, video- optimised encoding First generation products available; supports low latency and has low power modes Sony TransferJetVery short-range (~10cm), high-speed wireless for file transfer, c.375Mbps Targetted at file sharing rather than displays (OBEX/SCSI) May, 2012 Richard Edgar, et al

Submission doc.: IEEE 11-12/493r0 Page 12 Wireless Display Technologies – Handset Docking Suitability Technology CostVideoGraphicsPowerLatencyAdoptionOverall 6-10GHz WLAN ? DLNA   Wireless HD  ?  ? Wi-Fi Display   aa  ?  WiGig / ad  ?  WHDI ? ? ? Transfer Jet ?  ?  May, 2012 Richard Edgar, et al

Submission doc.: IEEE 11-12/493r0 Addressing Customer’s Concerns They don’t like new radios: Another chip Another antenna New host software Unproven technology And they don’t like proprietary lock-ins Alternative suppliers Little industry adoption Need compatible displays Re-use of ac PHY as an alternative to other technologies Standards based extensions to Wi-Fi MAC/ PHY for improved performance Optimised radio for low-power, high throughput Address coexistence of Wi-Fi with wireless docking May, 2012 IEEE standardisation resolves this 6-10GHz WLAN enables new capabilities and use cases to ac radios with minimal additional cost or complexity Richard Edgar, et al Page 13

Submission doc.: IEEE 11-12/493r0 Summary ac is expected to be the dominant PHY standard by 2016 Embedded mobile will is expected to be over 50% of the total ac market ac does not fully meet the needs of embedded mobile WLAN Power consumption is the major challenge 6-10GHz WLAN enables new capabilities to ac radios with minimal additional cost or complexity to meet the needs of tomorrows mobile WLAN enabled devices Slide 14Richard Edgar, et al May, 2012

Submission doc.: IEEE 11-12/493r0May, 2012 Richard Edgar, et alSlide 15 References ghz-extensions-to ac-part3.ppt ghz-extensions-to ac-part2.ppt 6-9ghz-extensions-to ppt ultrwideband-spectrum-for ppt