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Wireless Communications

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Title: Wireless Communications


1
Wireless Communications
  • UniForum Chicago
  • Bill Latura

2
Context
  • Basic Concepts
  • How a Cell Phone System Works
  • The 3 Gs
  • Cellular Data Networks
  • Wireless Data

3
Circuit and Packet Switching
  • Circuit-switched
  • A physical path is obtained for and dedicated to
    a single connection between two end-points in the
    network for the duration of the connection.
    Ordinary voice phone service is circuit-switched.
    The phone company reserves a specific physical
    path to the number being called for the duration
    of the call. During that time, no one else can
    use the physical lines involved.
  • Packet-switched
  • Small units of data called packets are routed
    through a network based on the destination
    address contained within each packet. The same
    data path can be used by many users in the
    network. This type of communication between
    sender and receiver is known as connectionless
    (rather than dedicated). Most traffic over the
    Internet uses packet switching. The Internet is
    basically a connectionless network.

4
Spread Spectrum Transmission
Direct Sequence
Frequency Hopping
  • Highest power consumption
  • Highest potential data rates
  • Lowest aggregate capacity using multiple physical
    layers than frequency hopping
  • Smallest number of geographically separate radio
    cells due to limited channels
  • Greater range than frequency hopping
  • Slices transmission into small coded bits and
    spreads message across whole spectrum
  • Utilizes wide signal channel
  • Lower cost
  • Lowest power consumption
  • Most tolerant to signal interference
  • Lower potential data rates
  • Highest aggregate capacity using multiple
    physical layers
  • Less range than direct sequence
  • Concentrates power in very narrow spectrum
  • Hops in random pattern 100 times/sec
  • Spreads power across band instead of signal

5
CDMA and TDMA
  • CDMA (Code-Division Multiple Access) a digital
    cellular technology that uses spread-spectrum
    techniques. Unlike systems that use TDMA, CDMA
    does not assign a specific frequency to each
    user. Instead, every channel uses the full
    available spectrum. Individual conversations are
    encoded with a pseudo-random digital sequence.
  • TDMA (Time Division Multiple Access) a technology
    for delivering digital wireless service using
    time division multiplexing. TDMA works by
    dividing a radio frequency into time slots and
    then allocating slots to multiple calls. In this
    way, a single frequency can support multiple,
    simultaneous data channels. TDMA is used by the
    GSM digital cellular system.

6
Cellular Networks
  • All BSs within a cluster are connected to a
    Mobile Switching Center(MSC).
  • Each MSC of a cluster is then connected to the
    MSC of other clusters and a PSTN main switching
    center.
  • The MSC stores information about the subscribers
    located within the cluster and is responsible for
    directing calls to them.

7
Making a Call
  • Scan Control Channels Your cell phone needs to
    use the "closest" base station because that's the
    one with the strongest signal and the one that
    will give the best connection. To find the
    closest base station, your phone checks all 21
    control channels and determines which has the
    strongest signal.
  • Choose Strongest Your cell phone chooses the
    strongest signal and decides to use that one for
    placing the call.
  • Send Origination Message Your cell phone now
    transmits a very short message (about 1/4 second)
    that contains the MIN (Mobile Identification
    Number, aka your cell phone number), its ESN
    (Electronic Serial Number), and the number you
    just dialed.
  • Get Channel Assignment After the cellular
    service provider verifies that you are a valid,
    paying customer (based on the MIN and ESN your
    phone sent), the base station sends a Channel
    Assignment message to your phone (also a short
    1/4-second burst). This message tells your phone
    where (that is, on which channel) the
    conversation will take place.
  • Begin Conversation

8
Roaming
  • A wireless roaming network has five components
    that make it work
  • A database for storing customer profile
    information such as features, dialing
    capabilities, and the home serving area
    identification. This is called the home location
    register (HLR).
  • A database of mobile numbers used by each switch
    on the network.
  • A signaling network for transmitting data
    messages between switches.
  • Routing specifications that direct the data
    messages to the appropriate destination.
  • Public long-distance connections for call
    delivery

9
Roaming
  • A registration cycle keeps track of a phone as it
    travels around the network. It begins when a
    wireless user powers on their phone. The general
    steps for this process are
  • When the phone is powered on, it sends a data
    message to the cellsite. This data message
    contains the Mobile Identification Number (MIN or
    phone number) and the Electronic Serial Number
    (ESN). The cellsite forwards this information to
    the switch.
  • The switch compares the MIN with a table of all
    MINs in the network. It will determine if the MIN
    belongs to a home customer, or to a visiting
    customer. In either case, the switch will request
    the subscriber's feature profile from the Home
    Location Register (HLR). The HLR for home
    customers may be integrated into the same switch
    or stored on a separate platform.

10
Roaming
  • If the HLR is a separate platform, or if the
    customer is visiting from another system, the
    switch then sends a data message to the HLR
    across the signaling network. Routing
    specifications stored at Signaling Transfer
    Points (STPs) provide the necessary information
    to direct the message to the home location
    register.
  • When the Home Location Register (HLR) receives
    the message, it checks the MIN the ESN. If the
    numbers are valid, the HLR records the location
    of the phone and returns a message containing the
    subscriber's feature list and calling
    restrictions to the visited switch.
  • Once the visited switch receives the return
    message, it creates a Visitor Location Register
    (VLR) to store information about the roamer,
    including the MIN, ESN, features, etc... This
    register will be used by the roamer as long as
    they are registered in the visited system.

11
Hand-over
  • During a call, the base station would monitor the
    signal level from the mobile phone. When the
    mobile phone is moving into a new cell, the
    signal level will fall to a critical value
    causing the base station to inform the Mobile
    Switching Center(MSC) about this event. The MSC
    would instruct all the surrounding base stations
    to measure the mobile phone's signal level and
    transfer control to the base station receiving
    the strongest signal level. This is known as
    hand-over and occurs within 400ms, so the phone
    user is hardly aware of a break.
  • Registration is done again with the new base
    station. Location information stored in the MSC
    about this mobile telephone is updated. If the
    mobile telephone is moved into a cell belonging
    to a different cluster it would also have to
    register with the new MSC.

12
1G (Analog)
  • Uses frequency division multiple access (FDMA) to
    communicate (every call in one area uses its own
    set of channels for communication)
  • No support for wireless data
  • NMT (Nordic Mobile Telephone) is an analog
    cellular phone system deployed in more than 40
    countries in Europe. NMT was the first analog
    cellular phone system (launched in the
    Scandinavian countries 1979). The system used
    originally 450 MHz band (NMT 450), but later when
    more capacity was needed, it was also adopted for
    900 MHz band (NMT 900).

13
1G (Analog)
  • AMPS (Advanced Mobile Phone System) is the analog
    cellular phone system used in North and South
    America. AMPS uses FDMA and operates at 800 MHz
    band. AMPS was introduced in the USA in 1983.
  • TACS (Total Access Communication System) was
    developed in Britain using the 900 MHz band. TACS
    was based on the AMPS system and was adopted in
    other countries such as Hong Kong and Japan.
  • ETACS (Extended Total Access Communication
    System) was developed in the UK and is available
    in Europe and Asia.

14
2G (Digital)
  • Uses digital encoding and includes CDMA, TDMA and
    GSM. Text messages can be sent on 2G networks,
    but more bandwidth hungry applications require
    2.5G.
  • Circuit switched
  • In the United States, GSM, TDMA, and CDMA are
    assigned two frequency ranges that include the
    frequency ranges assigned to analog cellular, 824
    MHz to 849 MHz and 869 MHz to 894 MHz, and also
    the frequency ranges of 1850 to 1910 MHz and 1930
    MHz to 1990 MHz.

15
2G (Digital)
  • CDMA (Code Division Multiple Access) uses a
    spread spectrum technique to scatter a radio
    signal across a wide range of frequencies.
  • IDEN, (Integrated Digital Enhanced Network) is a
    wireless technology from Motorola combining the
    capabilities of a digital cellular telephone,
    two-way radio, alphanumeric pager, and data/fax
    modem in a single network. iDEN operates in the
    800 MHz, 900MHz, and 1.5 GHz bands and is based
    on time division multiple access (TDMA) and GSM
    architecture.

16
2G (Digital)
  • GSM (Global System for Mobile Communications) is
    the digital transmission technique widely adopted
    in Europe and supported in North America. GSM
    uses 900 MHz and 1800 MHz in Europe. In North
    America, GSM uses the 1900 MHz band.
  • TDMA (Time Division Multiple Access) divides each
    cellular channel into three time slots in order
    to increase the amount of data that can be
    carried. GSM and D-AMPS use TDMA in one form or
    another. It is also generally used to describe
    what was formerly known as D-AMPS. TDMA networks
    are operated in the United States, Latin America,
    New Zealand, parts of Russia and Asia Pacific.

17
2G Vendor Support
  • Cingular supports TDMA and GSM.
  • Nextel relies on iDEN.
  • T-Mobile supports GSM.
  • ATT Wireless supports TDMA and GSM networks.
  • Verizon Wireless uses CDMA.

18
2.5G
  • An enhancement to 2G networks that allows them to
    operate in a "packet switched" manner
  • 2.5G networks incorporate 2G technology with
    GPRS' higher speeds to support data transport.
    2.5G is a bridge from the voice-centric 2G
    networks to the data-centric 3G networks.
  • GPRS (General Packet Radio Service) is a radio
    technology for GSM networks that adds
    packet-switching protocols. As a 2.5G technology,
    GPRS enables high-speed wireless Internet and
    other data communications. GPRS networks can
    deliver SMS, MMS, email, games, and WAP
    applications.

19
3G
  • 3G networks promise next-generation service with
    transmission rates of 144Kbps and higher that can
    support multimedia applications, such as video,
    video conferencing and Internet access. Both UMTS
    (WCDMA) and EDGE will support 3G services. 3G
    networks operate on a different frequency than 2G
    networks.

20
3G
  • UMTS (Universal Mobile Telecommunications System)
    or WCDM (Wideband Code Division Multiple Access)
    was selected as the successor to GSM. It is the
    European standard for 3G wideband digital radio
    communications, and it utilizes one 5 MHz channel
    for both voice and data, offering data speeds up
    to 2 Mbps.
  • EDGE is a mobile network radio technology that
    allows current GSM networks to offer 3G services
    within existing frequencies. As an evolution of
    GSM/GPRS, EDGE is an upgrade to GPRS' data and
    GSM's voice networks. EDGE provides data speed
    three times that of GPRS.

21
Cellular Data Networks
  • SMS
  • Short Message Service
  • MMS
  • Multimedia Message Service
  • GPRS
  • General Packet Radio Service
  • HSCSD
  • High Speed Circuit Switched Data
  • EDGE
  • Enhanced Data Rates for Global Evolution

22
Short Message Service (SMS)
  • Globally accepted wireless service that enables
    the transmission of alphanumeric messages between
    mobile devices and external systems
  • Available in US on GSM-based PCS as well as TDMA
    and CDMA based cellular systems
  • Short Message Service Center (SMSC) acts as a
    relay and store and forward system for messages
  • Point to point delivery of messages
  • Active mobile handset is able to receive or send
    a short message at any time, independent of
    whether a voice or data call is in progress
  • Utilizes out-of-band packet delivery and
    low-bandwidth message delivery
  • Guarantees delivery of the short message by the
    network. Temporary transmission failures are
    identified, and the message is stored in the
    network until the destination becomes available

23
MMS
  • Multimedia Message Service, a store-and-forward
    method of transmitting graphics, video clips,
    sound files and short text messages over wireless
    networks using the WAP protocol. Carriers deploy
    special servers, dubbed MMS Centers (MMSCs) to
    implement the offerings on their systems.
  • MMS also supports e-mail addressing, so the
    device can send e-mails directly to an e-mail
    address. The most common use of MMS is for
    communication between mobile phones. MMS,
    however, is not the same as e-mail. MMS is based
    on the concept of multimedia messaging. The
    presentation of the message is coded into the
    presentation file so that the images, sounds and
    text are displayed in a predetermined order as
    one singular message. MMS does not support
    attachments as e-mail does.
  • To the end user, MMS is similar to SMS.

24
GPRS
  • GPRS (General Packet Radio Service) is a
    specification for data transfer on TDMA and GSM
    networks. The theoretical limit for packet
    switched data is approx. 170 kb/s. A realistic
    bit rate is 30-70 kb/s. . GPRS supports both
    TCP/IP and X.25 communications.
  • It provides moderate speed data transfer, by
    using unused TDMA channels on a GSM network.
  • GSM circuit switch connections are still used for
    voice, but data is sent and received in "packets"
    in the same way as it would be in the fixed
    internet environment.
  • The advantage is that network resources are used
    more efficiently. Rather than maintaining a
    circuit for the duration of the connection, which
    ties up resources regardless of whether anything
    is actually being sent or received, GPRS only
    consumes resource when information packets are
    transmitted.

25
HSCSD
  • HSCSD (High Speed Circuit Switched Data) is a
    specification for data transfer over GSM
    networks. HSCSD utilizes up to four 9.6Kb or
    14.4Kb time slots, for a total bandwidth of
    38.4Kb or 57.6Kb.
  • 14.4Kb time slots are only available on GSM
    networks that operate at 1,800Mhz. 900Mhz GSM
    networks are limited to 9.6Kb time slots.
    Therefore, HSCSD is limited to 38.4Kbps on 900Mhz
    GSM networks. HSCSD can only achieve 57.6Kbps on
    1,800Mhz GSM networks.

26
HSCSD vs. GPRS
  • HSCSD has an advantage over GPRS in that HSCSD
    supports guaranteed quality of service because of
    the dedicated circuit-switched communications
    channel. This makes HSCSD a better protocol for
    timing-sensitive applications such as image or
    video transfer.
  • GPRS has the advantage over HSCSD for most data
    transfer because HSCSD, which is
    circuit-switched, is less bandwidth efficient
    with expensive wireless links than GPRS, which is
    packet-switched.
  • For an application such as downloading, HSCSD may
    be preferred, since circuit-switched data is
    usually given priority over packet-switched data
    on a mobile network, and there are few seconds
    when no data is being transferred.

27
EDGE
  • Enhanced Data Rates for Global Evolution (EDGE)
    is a bolt-on enhancement to 2G and GPRS networks.
    This technology is compatible with TDMA and GSM
    networks. EDGE uses the same spectrum allocated
    for GSM850, GSM900, GSM1800 and GSM1900
    operation.
  • Instead of employing GMSK (Gaussian minimum-shift
    keying) EDGE uses 8PSK (8 Phase Shift Keying)
    producing a 3bit word for every change in carrier
    phase. This effectively triples the gross data
    rate offered by GSM. EDGE, like GPRS, uses a rate
    adaptation algorithm that adapts the modulation
    and coding scheme (MCS) used to the quality of
    the radio channel, and thus the bit rate and
    robustness of data transmission. It introduces a
    new technology not found in GPRS, Incremental
    Redundancy, which, instead of retransmitting
    disturbed packets, sends more redundancy
    information to be combined in the receiver. This
    increases the probability of correct decoding.

28
Wireless Data
  • 802.11x
  • Bluetooth
  • ZigBee
  • UltraWideBand

29
WAP
  • Wireless Application Protocol
  • An application communication protocol
  • Used to access services and information
  • Inherited from Internet standards
  • Used for handheld devices such as mobile phones
  • A protocol designed for micro browsers
  • Enables the creating of web applications for
    mobile devices.
  • Uses the mark-up language WML (not HTML)
  • WML is defined as an XML 1.0 application

30
WAP
  • The WAP standard is based on HTML, XML and
    TCP/IP. It consists of a WML language
    specification, a WMLScript specification, and a
    Wireless Telephony Application Interface (WTAI)
    specification.
  • WML stands for Wireless Markup Language. It is a
    mark-up language inherited from HTML, but WML is
    based on XML, so it is much stricter than HTML.
  • WML uses WMLScript to run simple code on the
    client. WMLScript is a light JavaScript language.
    WML scripts are not embedded in the WML pages.
    WML pages only contain references to script URLs.
    WML scripts need to be compiled into byte code on
    a server before they can run in a WAP browser.

31
ISM Frequency Bands
The three ISM frequency bands are the only ones
available for unlicensed wireless transmission in
the US. Only one band has world-wide availability.
  • Industrial, Scientific, and Medical (ISM) spread
    spectrum modulation
  • 902-928 MHz
  • 2.4-2.4835 GHz (home of microwave oven band)
  • 5.725-5.850 GHz
  • under 1 watt transmitter output power
  • more bandwidth with higher frequencies, which
    support higher data rates.

32
802.11x (Wi-Fi)
  • Standards
  • The following standards exist
  • IEEE 802.11 - The original 2 Mbit/s, 2.4 GHz
    standard
  • IEEE 802.11a - 54 Mbit/s, 5 GHz standard
  • IEEE 802.11b - Enhancements to 802.11 to support
    5.5 and 11 Mbit/s
  • IEEE 802.11d - New countries
  • IEEE 802.11e - Enhancements QoS, including
    packet bursting
  • IEEE 802.11f - Inter-Access Point Protocol (IAPP)
  • IEEE 802.11g - 54 Mbit/s, 2.4 GHz (backwards
    compatible with b)
  • IEEE 802.11h - 5 GHz spectrum, Dynamic
    Channel/Frequency Selection (DCS/DFS) and
    Transmit Power Control (TPC) for European
    compatibility
  • IEEE 802.11i - Enhanced security
  • IEEE 802.11j - Extensions for Japan
  • IEEE 802.11n - Higher throughput improvements
  • IEEE 802.11p - Adding wireless capabilities to
    mobile vehicles such as ambulances and passenger
    cars

33
802.11b
  • 802.11b has a range of about 50 meters with the
    low-gain omnidirectional antennas typically used
    in 802.11b devices. 802.11b has a maximum
    throughput of 11 Mbit/s, however a significant
    percentage of this bandwidth is used for
    communications overhead in practice the maximum
    throughput is about 5.5 Mbit/s. Metal, water, and
    thick walls absorb 802.11b signals and decrease
    the range drastically. 802.11 runs in the 2.4 GHz
    spectrum and uses Carrier Sense Multiple Access
    with Collision Avoidance (CSMA/CA) as its media
    access method.
  • With high-gain external antennas, the protocol
    can also be used in fixed point-to-point
    arrangements, typically at ranges up to 8
    kilometers (although some report success at
    ranges up to 80-120 km where line of sight can be
    established). This is usually done to replace
    leased lines, or in place of microwave
    communications equipment. Current cards can
    operate at 11 Mbit/s, but will scale back to 5.5,
    then 2, then 1, if signal strength becomes an
    issue.

34
802.11a
  • The 802.11a standard uses the 5 GHz band, and
    operates at a raw speed of 54 Mbit/s, and more
    realistic net achievable speeds in the mid-20
    Mbit/s. The speed is reduced to 48, 36, 34, 18,
    12, 9 then 6 Mbit/s if required. 802.11a has 12
    non-overlapping channels, 8 dedicated to indoor
    and 4 to point to point.
  • 802.11a has not seen wide adoption because of the
    high adoption rate of 802.11b, and because of
    concerns about range at 5 GHz, 802.11a cannot
    reach as far as 802.11b, other things (such as
    same power limitations) being equal it is also
    absorbed more readily. Most manufacturers of
    802.11a equipment countered the lack of market
    success by releasing dual-band or
    dual-mode/tri-mode cards that can automatically
    handle 802.11a and b or a, b and g as available.
    Access point equipment which can support all
    these standards simultaneously is also available.

35
802.11g
  • 802.11g works in the 2.4 GHz band (like 802.11b)
    but operates at 54 Mbit/s raw, or about 24.7
    Mbit/s net, throughput like 802.11a. It is fully
    backwards compatible with b and uses the same
    frequencies. In older equipment, however, the
    presence of an 802.11b participant significantly
    reduces the speed of an 802.11g network.
  • A new feature called Super G is now integrated in
    certain access points. These can boost network
    speeds up to 108 Mbit/s by using channel bonding.
    This feature may interfere with other networks
    and may not support all b and g client cards. In
    addition, packet bursting techniques are also
    available in some chipsets and products which
    will also considerably increase speeds. Again,
    they may not be compatible with some equipment.

36
802.11n
  • In January 2004, IEEE announced that it will
    develop a new standard for wide-area wireless
    networks. The real speed would be 100 Mbit/s
    (even 250 Mbit/s in PHY level), and so up to 4-5
    times faster than 802.11g, and perhaps 50 times
    faster than 802.11b.
  • As projected, 802.11n will also offer a better
    operating distance than current networks. The
    standardization progress is expected to be
    completed by the end of 2006.

37
802.11 Security (WEP)
  • Wired Equivalent Privacy
  • A security protocol for wireless local area
    networks defined in the 802.11b standard. WEP is
    designed to provide the same level of security as
    that of a wired LAN. LANs are inherently more
    secure than WLANs because LANs are somewhat
    protected by the physical properties of their
    structure, having some or all part of the network
    inside a building that can be protected from
    unauthorized access. WLANs, which operate over
    radio waves, do not have the same physical
    structure and therefore are more vulnerable to
    tampering. WEP aims to provide security by
    encrypting data over radio waves so that it is
    protected as it is transmitted from one end point
    to another.
  • Data encryption protects the vulnerable wireless
    link between clients and access points once this
    measure has been taken, other typical LAN
    security mechanisms such as password protection,
    end-to-end encryption, virtual private networks
    (VPNs), and authentication can be put in place to
    ensure privacy.

38
802.11 Security (WEP)
  • Some versions use the 40-bit key that was
    originally used to formulate the standard, while
    other newer versions use a 128-bit (104 in
    reality) key to each is added a 24-bit
    initialization vector (IV) which is transmitted
    in the clear.
  • When WEP is active in a wireless LAN, each 802.11
    packet is encrypted separately with an RC4 cipher
    stream generated by an RC4 key. This key is
    composed of a 24-bit initialization vector (IV)
    and the 40 (or 104)-bit WEP key. The encrypted
    packet is generated with a bitwise exclusive OR
    (XOR) of the original packet and the RC4 stream.
    The IV is chosen by the sender and can be changed
    periodically so every packet won't be encrypted
    with the same cipher stream. The IV is sent in
    the clear with each packet. An additional 4-byte
    Integrity Check Value (ICV) is computed on the
    original packet and appended to the end. The ICV
    (be careful not to confuse this with the IV) is
    also encrypted with the RC4 cipher stream.

39
802.11 Security (WEP Weaknesses)
  • WEP has been widely criticized for a number of
    weaknesses
  • A high percentage of wireless networks have WEP
    disabled because of the administrative overhead
    of maintaining a shared WEP key.
  • WEP has the same problem as all systems based
    upon shared keys any secret held by more than
    one person soon becomes public knowledge. Take
    for example an employee who leaves a company -
    they still know the shared WEP key. The
    ex-employee could sit outside the company with an
    802.11 NIC and sniff network traffic or even
    attack the internal network.
  • The ICV algorithm is not appropriate The WEP ICV
    is based on CRC-32, an algorithm for detecting
    noise and common errors in transmission. CRC-32
    is an excellent checksum for detecting errors,
    but an awful choice for a cryptographic hash.
    Better-designed encryption systems use algorithms
    such as MD5 or SHA-1 for their ICVs.
  • The initialization vector that seeds the WEP
    algorithm is sent in the clear.
  • The WEP checksum is linear and predictable.

40
802.11 Security (WPA)
  • Wi-Fi Protected Access
  • The Wi-Fi Alliance has taken a subset of the
    draft 802.11i standard, calling it WPA, and now
    certifies devices that meet the requirements.
  • WPA uses Temporal Key Integrity Protocol (TKIP)
    as the protocol and algorithm to improve security
    of keys used with WEP. It changes the way keys
    are derived and rotates keys more often for
    security. It also adds a message-integrity-check
    function to prevent packet forgeries.
  • While WPA goes a long way toward addressing the
    shortcomings of WEP, not all users will be able
    to take advantage of it. That's because WPA might
    not be backward-compatible with some legacy
    devices and operating systems. Moreover, not all
    users can share the same security infrastructure.
    Some users will have a PDA and lack the
    processing resources of a PC.
  • TKIP/WPA will degrade performance unless a WLAN
    system has hardware that will run and accelerate
    the WPA protocol. For most WLANs, there's
    currently a trade-off between security and
    performance without the presence of hardware
    acceleration in the access point.

41
802.11 Security (RSN)
  • Robust Security Network
  • RSN uses dynamic negotiation of authentication
    and encryption algorithms between access points
    and mobile devices. The authentication schemes
    proposed in the draft standard are based on
    802.1X and Extensible Authentication Protocol
    (EAP). The encryption algorithm is Advanced
    Encryption Standard (AES).
  • Dynamic negotiation of authentication and
    encryption algorithms lets RSN evolve with the
    state of the art in security, adding algorithms
    to address new threats and continuing to provide
    the security necessary to protect information
    that WLANs carry.
  • Using dynamic negotiation, 802.1X, EAP and AES,
    RSN is significantly stronger than WEP and WPA.
    However, RSN will run very poorly on legacy
    devices. Only the latest devices have the
    hardware required to accelerate the algorithms in
    clients and access points, providing the
    performance expected of today's WLAN products.
  • WPA will improve security of legacy devices to a
    minimally acceptable level, but RSN is the future
    of over-the-air security for 802.11.

42
Bluetooth
  • Royalty free operation
  • 721 kbps plus three voice channels
  • 2.402-2.480 GHz unlicensed ISM band
  • Frequency hopping spread spectrum
  • 79 hops separated by 1 MHz
  • Range lt 20 feet
  • Transmit power 0.1mW

Bluetooth supports both point-to-point and point
to multi-point connections. Several Piconets can
be established and linked together ad hoc. Each
Piconet is identified by a different frequency
hopping sequence.
43
Bluetooth
  • Moderate duty cycle, secondary battery lasts same
    as master
  • Very high QoS and very low, guaranteed latency
  • Quasi-static star network up to seven clients
    with ability to participate in more than one
    network
  • Frequency Hopping Spread Spectrum is extremely
    difficult to create extended networks without
    large synchronization cost

44
ZigBee
  • ZigBee-compliant products take full advantage of
    a powerful IEEE 802.15.4 physical radio standard
    and operate in unlicensed bands worldwide at
    2.4GHz (global), 915Mhz (Americas) and 868Mhz
    (Europe).
  • Raw data throughput rates of 250Kbs can be
    achieved at 2.4GHz (16 channels), 40Kbs at 915Mhz
    (10 channels) and 20Kbs at 868Mhz (1 channel).
  • Transmission distances range from 10 to 100
    meters, depending on power output and
    environmental characteristics

45
ZigBee
  • Very low duty cycle, very long primary battery
    life
  • Static and dynamic star and mesh networks,
    gt65,000 nodes, with low latency available
  • Ability to remain quiescent for long periods
    without communications
  • Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum allows devices to
    sleep without the requirement for close
    synchronization

46
ZigBee Applications
  • Lighting controls
  • Automatic Meter Reading
  • Wireless smoke and CO detectors
  • HVAC control
  • Heating control
  • Home security
  • Environmental controls
  • Blind, drapery and shade controls
  • Medical sensing and monitoring
  • Universal Remote Control to a Set-Top Box which
    includes Home Control
  • Industrial and building automation

47
UltraWideBand
  • Bluetooth on steroids
  • Designed for short-range, wireless personal area
    networks (WPANs) enabling wireless connection of
    multiple devices for transmission of video, audio
    and other high-bandwidth data.
  • Its use will be to relay data from a host device
    to other devices in the immediate area (up to 10
    meters or 30 feet).
  • UWB uses very low-powered, short-pulse radio
    signals many times in the picosecond duration
    range to transfer data over a very wide range of
    frequencies. A UWB transmission involves billions
    of pulses spread over several gigahertz.

48
UltraWideBand
  • UWB should deliver bandwidths from about 40Mbps
    to 600Mbps, and eventually data rates could be up
    to gigabits-per-second (with higher power).
  • UWB systems consume very little power, around one
    ten-thousandth of that of cell phones. This makes
    UWB practical for use in smaller devices, such as
    cell phones and PDAs, that users carry at all
    times.
  • Because UWB operates at such low power, it has
    very little interference impact on other systems.
    UWB causes less interference than conventional
    radio-network solutions. In addition, the
    relatively wide spectrum that UWB utilizes
    significantly minimizes the impact of
    interference from other systems as well.
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