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Wireless Communication

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Title: Wireless Communication


1
Wireless Communication
  • By Ching-Ting Na
  • Steven Phan
  • Stephanie Le

2
Estimated to reach 700 Million cellular phone
users world-wide by the year 2003
3
Multimedia Wireless Communications Any Time and
Anywhere
4
Current Wireless Systems
  • Cellular Systems
  • Point-to-Point Wireless Links
  • Wireless LANs
  • Wireless WANs
  • Satellite Systems
  • HomeRF and Bluetooth

5
Beyond VoiceWireless Applications
  • Wireless Information Devices
  • Wireless LANs
  • Wireless Video/Music
  • Multimedia Home Networks
  • Smart Homes / Appliances
  • Remote Learning / Medicine
  • Autonomous Vehicles / Robots

6
Historical Overview
7
It Started with the Telegraph
We call the electric telegraph the most
perfect invention of modern times as
anything more perfect than this is scarcely
conceivable, and we really begin to wonder what
will be left for the next generation, upon which
to expend the restless energies of the human
mind. -- an Australian newspaper, 1853
8
Critical Attributes ofTelecommunications Systems
  • Speed
  • Ability to transmit information in
    real-time
  • Electronic transmission faster than
    transportation
  • Coverage
  • Beyond regional national and international
    in scale
  • Metcalfs Law the more connected, the more
    useful
  • Reliability

9
Critical Attributes ofTelecommunications
Systems(Cont.)
  • Cost
  • 1866 20 word telegram cost 100 (4 months
    wages)
  • Security
  • Transmitted information as knowledge, news,
    secrets
  • Always an element of government oversight and
    control

10
Wireless Background
1907 Commercial Trans-Atlantic Wireless
Service Huge ground stations 30 x
100m antenna masts Beginning of
the end for cable-based telegraphy WW I
Rapid development of communications intelligence,
intercept technology,
cryptography 1920 Marconi discovers
shortwave (lt100 m) radio Longwave
follow contour of land Very
high transmit power, 200 KW
Shortwaves reflect, refract, and absorb, like
light Higher frequencies made
possible by vacuum tube
Cheaper, smaller, better quality transmitters
11
Other Important Dates
1915 Wireless voice transmission NY to SF
1921 Police car dispatch radios, Detroit
1935 First telephone call around the world WW
II Rapid development of radio technology
1974 FCC allocates 40 MHz for cellular
telephony 1982 European GSM and Inmarsat
established 1984 Breakup of ATT 1984
Initial deployment of AMPS cellular system
12
Mobile Telephony
13
1st Generation
  • Time Frame 1984 - 1996
  • Frequency Band 800 MHz
  • Services Analog Mobile Telephony
  • Voice Band Data
  • Examples AMPS, TACS, ETACS, NTT.

14
2nd Generation
  • Time Frame 1996 - 2000
  • Frequency Band 800 1900 MHz
  • Services Digital Voice
  • Messaging
  • Examples GSM, CDMA, TDMA..

15
3rd Generation
  • Time Frame 2000 - 2010
  • Frequency Band 2 GHz
  • Services High speed data
  • Broadband video
  • Multimedia
  • Examples IMT-2000, UMTS.

16
Communication
  • (via cellular phones)

17
Introduction
  • Millions of people in the United States and
    around the world use cellular phones. They are
    such great gadgets -- with a cell phone, you can
    talk to anyone on the planet from just about
    anywhere!

18
Introduction
  • These days, cell phones provide an incredible
    array of functions, and new ones are being added
    at a very fast pace. Depending on the cell-phone
    model, you can
  • Store contact information
  • Make task or to-do lists
  • Keep track of appointments and set reminders
  • Use the built-in calculator for simple math
  • Send or receive e-mail
  • Get information (news, entertainment, stock
    quotes) from the Internet
  • Play simple games
  • Integrate other devices such as PDAs, MP3 players
    and GPS receivers

19
How does a cellular phone work?
20
The Cell Approach
  • One of the most interesting things about a cell
    phone is that it is actually a radio -- an
    extremely sophisticated radio, but a radio
    nonetheless.
  • It is a combination of two communication
    technologies.
  • The telephone, which was invented by Alexander
    Graham Bell in 1876.
  • Wireless communication, which can trace its roots
    to the invention of the radio by Nikolai Tesla in
    the 1880s (formally presented in 1894 by a young
    Italian named Guglielmo Marconi).

21
Interesting Facts
  • Most newer digital cellular phones have some sort
    of entertainment programs on them, ranging from
    simple dice-throwing games to memory and logic
    puzzles.
  • Approximately 20 percent of American teens (more
    girls than boys) own a cellular phone.
  • Cellular phones are more popular in European
    countries than they are in the United States --
    more than 60 percent of Europeans own a cell
    phone, compared to about 40 percent of Americans.

22
In the dark ages
  • people who really needed mobile-communications
    ability installed radio telephones in their cars.
    In the radio-telephone system, there was one
    central antenna tower per city, and perhaps 25
    channels available on that tower. This central
    antenna meant that the phone in your car needed a
    powerful transmitter -- big enough to transmit 40
    or 50 miles (about 70 km). It also meant that not
    many people could use radio telephones -- not
    enough channels.

23
In the cellular age!!
  • The genius of the cellular system is the division
    of a city into small cells.
  • The cellular approach requires a large number of
    base stations in a city of any size.
  • Each cell is typically sized at about 10 square
    miles.
  • Each cell has a base station that consists of a
    tower and a small building containing the radio
    equipment (more on base stations later).
  • Each carrier in each city also runs one central
    office called the Mobile Telephone Switching
    Office (MTSO).
  • Cells in a hexagonal grid

http//www.howstuffworks.com/
24
Advantages in the cellular approach
  • Division of a city into small cells allows
    extensive frequency reuse across a city.
  • A single cell in an analog system uses
    one-seventh of the available duplex voice
    channels.
  • Each cell (of the seven on a hexagonal grid) is
    using one-seventh of the available channels so it
    has a unique set of frequencies and there are no
    collisions
  • A cell-phone carrier typically gets 832 radio
    frequencies to use in a city.
  • Each cell phone uses two frequencies per call --
    a duplex channel -- so there are typically 395
    voice channels per carrier. (The other 42
    frequencies are used for control channels)
  • Therefore, each cell has about 56 voice channels
    available.
  • The same frequencies can be reused in
    non-adjacent cells (more on this later).
  • With digital transmission methods, each cell has
    about 168 voice channels available.

25
Low-power transmitters
  • Cell phones have low-power transmitters in them.
  • Many cell phones have two signal strengths 0.6
    watts and 3 watts (for comparison, most CB radios
    transmit at 4 watts).
  • The base station is also transmitting at low
    power.
  • Low-power transmitters have two advantages
  • The transmissions of a base station and the
    phones within its cell do not make it very far
    outside that cell. Therefore, in the figure
    above, both of the purple cells can reuse the
    same 56 frequencies. The same frequencies can be
    reused extensively across the city.
  • The power consumption of the cell phone, which is
    normally battery-operated, is relatively low. Low
    power means small batteries, and this is what has
    made handheld cellular phones possible.

26
Cell phone codes
  • All cell phones have special codes associated
    with them.
  • Electronic Serial Number (ESN) - a unique 32-bit
    number programmed into the phone when it is
    manufactured (permanent).
  • Mobile Identification Number (MIN) - a 10-digit
    number derived from your phone's number
    (programmed into the phone when you purchase a
    service plan and have the phone activated).
  • System Identification Code (SID) - a unique
    5-digit number that is assigned to each carrier
    by the FCC
  • ESN is permanent, but MIN and SID are programmed
    into the phone when you purchase a service plan
    and have the phone activated).
  • These codes are used to identify the phone, the
    phone's owner and the service provider.

27
Inside a Cell Phone
  • Components of a cell phone
  • A circuit board containing the brains/CPU of the
    phone
  • An antenna
  • A liquid crystal display (LCD)
  • A keyboard
  • A microphone
  • A speaker
  • A battery

28
Inside a Cell Phone
  • The circuit board is the heart of the system.

The back of circuit
The front of circuit
http//www.howstuffworks.com/
29
Inside a Cell Phone
  • Components and functions
  • The microprocessor
  • handles all of the housekeeping chores for the
    keyboard and display, deals with command and
    control signaling with the base station and also
    coordinates the rest of the functions on the
    board
  • The analog-to-digital and digital-to-analog
  • conversion chips translate the outgoing audio
    signal from analog to digital and the incoming
    signal from digital back to analog.
  • The digital signal processor (DSP)
  • processor designed to perform signal-manipulation
    calculations at high speed.
  • microprocessor

http//www.howstuffworks.com/
30
Inside a Cell Phone
  • The ROM and Flash memory
  • provide storage for the phone's operating system
    and customizable features, such as the phone
    directory.
  • The radio frequency (RF) and power section
  • handles power management and recharging, and also
    deals with the hundreds of FM channels.
  • the RF amplifiers
  • handle signals traveling to and from the antenna.

31
Inside a Cell Phone
  • The display has grown considerably in size as the
    number of features in cell phones have increased.
  • Most current phones offer built-in phone
    directories, calculators and even games. And many
    of the phones incorporate some type of PDA or Web
    browser.

Flash memory card on board
http//www.howstuffworks.com/
32
Inside a Cell Phone
speaker
microphone
battery backup
33
I know what happened when someone tries to call
you(part 1)
  • When you first power up the phone, it listens for
    an SID on the control channel.
  • The control channel is a special frequency that
    the phone and base station use to talk to one
    another about things like call set-up and channel
    changing. If the phone cannot find any control
    channels to listen to, it knows it is out of
    range and displays a "no service" message.
  • When it receives the SID, the phone compares it
    to the SID programmed into the phone. If the SIDs
    match, the phone knows that the cell it is
    communicating with is part of its home system.

34
I know what happened when someone tries to call
you(part 2)
  • Along with the SID, the phone also transmits a
    registration request, and the MTSO keeps track of
    your phone's location in a database -- this way,
    the MTSO knows which cell you are in when it
    wants to ring your phone.
  • The MTSO gets the call, and it tries to find you.
    It looks in its database to see which cell you
    are in.
  • The MTSO picks a frequency pair that your phone
    will use in that cell to take the call.

35
I know what happened when someone tries to call
you(part 3)
  • The MTSO communicates with your phone over the
    control channel to tell it which frequencies to
    use, and once your phone and the tower switch on
    those frequencies, the call is connected.
  • As you move toward the edge of your cell, your
    cell's base station notes that your signal
    strength is diminishing. Meanwhile, the base
    station in the cell you are moving toward (which
    is listening and measuring signal strength on all
    frequencies, not just its own one-seventh) sees
    your phone's signal strength increasing. The two
    base stations coordinate with each other through
    the MTSO, and at some point, your phone gets a
    signal on a control channel telling it to change
    frequencies. This hand off switches your phone to
    the new cell.

36
Roaming
  • If the SID on the control channel does not match
    the SID programmed into your phone, then the
    phone knows it is roaming.
  • The MTSO of the cell that you are roaming in
    contacts the MTSO of your home system
  • The MTSO checks its database to confirm that the
    SID of the phone you are using is valid
  • Your home system verifies your phone to the local
    MTSO
  • The MTSO tracks your phone as you move through
    its cells.

http//www.howstuffworks.com/
37
Cell Phones and CBs
  • A good way to understand the sophistication of a
    cell phone is to compare it to a CB radio or a
    walkie-talkie.
  • Simplex vs. duplex - Both walkie-talkies and CB
    radios are simplex devices. That is, two people
    communicating on a CB radio use the same
    frequency, so only one person can talk at a time.
    A cell phone is a duplex device. That means that
    you use one frequency for talking and a second,
    separate frequency for listening. Both people on
    the call can talk at once.
  • Channels - A walkie-talkie typically has one
    channel, and a CB radio has 40 channels. A
    typical cell phone can communicate on 1,664
    channels or more!
  • Range - A walkie-talkie can transmit about 1 mile
    (1.6 km) using a 0.25-watt transmitter. A CB
    radio, because it has much higher power, can
    transmit about 5 miles (8 km) using a 5-watt
    transmitter. Cell phones operate within cells,
    and they can switch cells as they move around.
    Cells give cell phones incredible range. Someone
    using a cell phone can drive hundreds of miles
    and maintain a conversation the entire time
    because of the cellular approach.

38
Wireless Communication
  • Benefits and Risks

39
Wireless Communication Benefits
  • For individuals, wireless communication provides
    convenience, convenience, convenience
  • In industries, such as health care, wireless
    communication can improve their services

40
Wireless Communication Benefits Individuals
  • How many people have cell phones, palm pilots?
  • Over 90 million people have cell phones, and palm
    pilots

41
Wireless Communication Benefits Individuals
  • Economic They allow us to conduct business while
    stuck in traffic
  • Personal Safety They make it easier to call for
    help in an emergency
  • Mechanical Roadside assistance is just a phone
    call away
  • Access We could stay in touch with loved ones
    and colleagues
  • Money Saving Its sometime cheaper to call
    long-distance from our cars than from our homes

42
Wireless Communication Benefits Industries
  • Health Care Industry
  • Today's applications in wireless devices can
    handle tasks such as basic forms of charge
    capture, prescription writing, clinical
    documentation, lab test management, and alert
    messaging/communication.

43
Wireless Communication Benefits Health Care
  • Some examples of how wireless devices can help
    the Health Care industry
  • e-Encounters
  • e-Prescriptions
  • e-Disease Management

44
Wireless Communication Risks
  • The 2 S Risks
  • Security
  • Safety

45
Wireless Communication Risks Security
  • Major concern for the Industry
  • There is no universal industry standard or
    functional protocol for wireless devices such as
    cell phones and PDAs, therefore, we cant have
    truly effective security protocol

46
Wireless Communication Risks Security
  • WAP is short for Wireless Application Protocol,
    and is the standard that is used to connect
    PDAs, mobile phones and other wireless devices
    to the Internet.
  • WAP offers WTLS-based security
  • WTLS has security encryption but has some issues
    with data gram truncation, message forgery
    attack, and key-search shortcut for some
    exportable keys.

47
Wireless Communication Risks Security
  • New features, new frequency allocation, BUT no
    time to develop security
  • Lack of transparency

48
Wireless Communication RisksSafety
  • Dangerous when driving and using a wireless
    device
  • NHTSA has determined through research that driver
    inattention is a primary or contributing factor
    in as many as 50 of all traffic accidents

49
Wireless Communication Risks Safety
  • Any danger between cell phone use and brain
    cancer?
  • Answer is YES and NO
  • The lack of ionizing radiation and the low energy
    level emitted from cell phones and absorbed by
    human tissues make it unlikely that these devices
    cause cancer. Moreover, several well-designed
    epidemiological studies find no consistent
    association between cell phone use and brain
    cancer.

50
Wireless Communication Risks Safety
  • George Carlo is a public health researcher who
    spearheaded a three-year, 27 million research
    program for the cellular telephone industry on
    possible health risks associated with such
    devices.
  • In his medical journal, Medscape General
    Medicine,he states that radio frequency radiation
    from wireless phone antennae "appears to cause
    genetic damage in human blood," while another
    case study uncovered a "statistically significant
    increase" in neuro-epithelial brain tumors among
    cell phone users.

51
Wireless Communication Risks Safety Tips
  • Handheld users should wear a headset and clip the
    phone on their belt, moving antenna far from head
    to reduce risk of brain cancer.
  • Buy a "hands-free" kit for your car and use an
    external antenna (this should also help reduce
    the risk of "talking-and-driving" accidents).
  • The U.K. Ministry of Health warns against
    cell-phone use by children.

52
Wireless Communication Risks Safety Tips
  • Pregnant women should avoid using cell phones.
  • Check the radiation information that the CTIA
    mandated for inclusion in all cell-phone boxes,
    available by fall 2000 (this information is
    available at point-of-sale in U.K.).
  • Buy a cell-phone with the lowest radiation
    output.

53
Wireless Communication Questions To Ponder
  • Should states control the usage of wireless
    devices while driving?
  • What kind of ethics are behind using wireless
    devices?
  • Shouldnt all people reframe from using cell
    phones while driving so that they dont put
    others at risk?
  • Are companies liable for health-risks which
    involve using wireless devices?

54
Wireless Communication Summary
  • Wireless Communication can be of great advantage
    to individuals and companies because they provide
    an easy way to communicate with one another
  • There are risks involved such as security and
    privacy, which both parties need to take into
    consideration
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