Section One
Section One
Telecoms
Telecoms
Telecoms
Trends:
functionality reliability efficiency quality
2G ? digital speech, fax, data circuit-switched & packet-switched analogue speech circuit-switched 1980 1990 2000 time speech optimised
1G
Telecoms
Telecoms
Air Interface
cells
Telecoms
Telecoms
GSM Europe North America South America China Japan Asia Pacific
cdmaOne
TDMA (IS-136)
PDC
Telecoms
Telecoms
Frequency
Frequency Division
Time
Frequency Time Division
User 1
User 2
User 3
User 1
User 2
Time
Frequency
User 7 User 4 User 1 User 8 User 5 User 2 User 9 User 6 User 3 User 7 User 4 User 1
Time
Frequency Code Division
User 1-?
Time
Telecoms
Telecoms
USER
RADIO ACCESS
BTS
BTS
BSC
CORE NETWORK
GMSC
Other Networks
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rapid subscriber growth dwindling spare capacity rapid growth of basic data services growth of mobile e-mail and basic Internet Access decreases in the price of voice services
Contribution to Capacity Requirements Inefficient network/ technology require large investments to increase capacity
2G Network Capacity
Basic data services Rapid subscriber growth (dwindling revenue per voice call) Time Data rate per user constrained by technology Payment based on amount of data or time connected rather than content
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Telecoms
Rapid growth in the Internet Increasingly data-hungry applications Data overtakes voice traffic Prices for voice decrease Users want mobility
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Telecoms
Huge potential for Mobile Internet Bleak future for voice (revenues) Access needed to desktop applications when mobile
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2.5 i-Mode
Perhaps the first evidence that the new Mobile Internet could create huge demand and hence new revenue streams, came from Japan. NTT DoCoMos i-Mode service attracted over 10 million subscribers to its service within the first year, with unexpectedly popular (and revenue-generating) services including ring-tone and cartoon character download. Even though the data rates associated with the service were still slow (only 9.6kb/s), i-Mode used packet-based delivery to avoid dial-up, and kept services simple yet attractive. One of the most important features of the i-Mode service was also in the number of different services which were available, provided not by NTT DoCOMo themselves, but by allowing access for a whole range of 3rd party developers. This was the first time that any operator had built a business model which enabled such a wide ranging service offering, and used the wider development community to provide these services directly to their subscriber base.
Telecoms
2G Mobile Internet slow dial-up slow downloads unreliable expensive little choice
(i-Mode)
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Web Browsing Networked Games Music Downloading Mobile Video Clips Mobile Shopping* Mobile Banking* Information (timetables, hotels, tourist etc.)* Navigation* Video Telephony Picture Mail Multimedia Messaging Video Conferencing Intranet Access Corporate Database Access Business Information (stocks, news, salesforce etc.)* Telematics* Remote Metering & Security* Wireless Vending
Consumer Entertainment
Consumer Services
Communication
Corporate
Machine-to-Machine
Bold services which need 3G for sufficient speed and quality * services which may be location based
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Telecoms
Phase 1
(1990)
Phase 2
(1995)
Advanced features, e.g: IN (CAMEL) Enhanced Speech Higher Data Rates Transport enhancements: HSCSD, GPRS, EDGE
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Telecoms
USER 1
Switches
USER 3
USER 2 Network
USER 4
USER 1
Routers
USER 3
USER 4
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Telecoms
USER
RADIO ACCESS
BTS
SGSN
MSC
Circuit-Switched (dial-up)
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4.6 EDGE
EDGE is a technology at the air interface to GSM, which provides an improved modulation scheme and improves spectrum efficiency. EDGE uses 8 Phase Shift Keying rather than standard GSM Gaussian Minimum Shift Keying. This has the effect of increasing data rates, with rates as high as 384kb/s in a 200KHz GSM carrier (for 4 Timeslot GPRS operation). It involves no core network changes, although many see its main use in combination with the changes to deliver high data rates using a GPRS core. A variation of EDGE has also been defined for use with US-TDMA (IS-136) systems. In this context, EDGE is seen very much as a 3G radio access technology in its own right, since it is capable of delivering 3rd Generation data rates. An advantage of EDGE as a 3G technology is that it does not require any further spectrum for operators. The use of a common air interface technology in both IS-136 and GSM networks is also seen as a possible route to allow convergence and roaming between these two network types. The UMTS system makes no assumption that EDGE will be present in the 2nd Generation network from which UMTS evolves, although the continued standardisation of GERAN (GSM EDGE Radio Access Network) has now been moved within the same standardisation body in order to ensure future interoperability between UMTS and EDGE radio access schemes. Such interoperability will be important in situations where UMTS is rolled out as islands of coverage in the early stages, since EDGE can help to deliver high data rates through the sea of GSM/GPRS which surround these UMTS islands.
Telecoms
Changes to radio Interface only (8PSK instead of GMSK for GSM) Involves no new spectrum Can support 3G-like data rates (384kbp/s user rate) Also defined for use in IS-136 TDMA systems Possible fill-in technology during early UMTS rollout Can be combined with GPRS for enhanced services
Core Network
Fig. 14 EDGE
Informa
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Telecoms
Multimedia Support
UMTS Flexibility
QoS Guarantees
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Telecoms
GSM
Standardised Services
Camel
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6. STANDARDISATION PROCESSES
6.1 Brief History of 3G Research
The ITU coined the term International Mobile Telephony 2000 (IMTS 2000) to refer to an envisaged scenario whereby mobile users would have a single system worldwide, giving them access to a much larger array of services, including seamless convergence with the services they had available on their fixed (and satellite) networks. The original ITU goal was to drive development of a single standard worldwide for 3rd Generation mobile, avoiding the problems currently, when trying to roam between different countries. IMT2000 is also referred to in some early papers as FPLMTS (Future Public Land Mobile Telecommunications System). Of course research and development into the 3rd Generation had already started elsewhere, as early as the start of the 1990s, in order to build on GSM and the other 2nd Generation systems around the world. The concentration of this work was on improving the efficiency of the radio interface, in order to better utilise scarce spectrum resources. In Europe, EU projects in RACE I & RACE II (Research for Advanced Communication Technologies in Europe), in particular CODIT (Code Division Testbed), and ACTS (Advanced Communication Technologies and Services), in particular FRAMES (Future Radio Wideband Multiple Access System), eventually led to the choice of the 3rd Generation air interface within ETSI. In fact a number of systems were proposed to ETSI, with the eventual choice of a radio technology known as Wideband CDMA (W-CDMA) for the UMTS radio interface being decided on the basis of best fit with the ITUs IMT2000. In this respect the earlier decision by Japans standardisation body ARIB (Association of Radio Industries and Businesses), to choose a W-CDMA radio interface for 3G was a strong factor, since it brought the promise of greater global harmonisation. Following early development work within ETSI, the development and specification work was passed over to a global group known as the 3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP).
Telecoms
GLOBAL
Standards: Release 99
EUROPE
JAPAN
EU RESEARCH
RACE 1 RACE 2
1988
1992
1995
1997
1998
1999
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Telecoms
fn
5MHz Spacing
fn+1
QoS Negotiation
Separate Frequencies
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Telecoms
DECT
TDMA (IS136)
GSM
cdmaOne (IS95)
2G
Evolution Paths
IMT2000
DECT
TDMA Family
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Telecoms
Market Representation Partners GSA GSM Association UMTS Forum IPv6 Forum 3G.IP UWC MWIF
Fig. 20 3GPP
Informa
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3GPP TSG
Core Network
Terminals
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Telecoms
GSM
3GPP Release 99
New radio access Higher data rates Multiplexed services Bearer flexibility Improved security Multimedia messaging Improved service creation
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Telecoms
MC-CDMA (cdma2000)
MC-TDMA (DECT)
ETSI (Europe)
SC-TDMA
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7. SPECTRUM HARMONISATION
7.1 History of Spectrum Planning
One of the key planks in the ITU desire for 3rd Generation systems to be seamless globally, is the provision of spectrum. In particular, it is clearly easier to implement a system globally if spectrum bands are the same in all the different regions of the world. Unfortunately this is not currently the case. In particular, the US PCS spectrum allocations are at odds with the rest of the world and with no immediate prospect of rearrangement. The spectrum allocations for IMT2000, including UMTS, were first discussed as far back as 1992, where some common bands were defined (except for the US). More recently, the World Radio Conference (WRC2000) meeting in Istanbul, in May 2000, allocated further spectrum for future IMT2000 use. This was in response to lobbying by groups such as the UMTS Forum and GSM Association to increase the amount of spectrum assigned to 3rd Generation systems, on the basis that capacity constraints would once again be reached quickly, should the services take off as hoped. The end result of negotiations was a spectrum map as shown opposite. The key points to take away from this diagram are as follows: Continued lack of harmonisation between the US and rest of the world for most of the spectrum band, although the 1710 1885 MHz IMT2000 band is common to all regions [although currently used by GSM1800 in some] Extra spectrum bands assigned to IMT2000 by the WRC2000 meeting, including the 2500 2690 MHz band in all regions The split between uplink and downlink frequency bands for the FDD mode of UMTS, and the location of TDD mode frequency bands. There is a current lack of any TDD component for 3G in Japan. In addition some regions have expressed particular preferences, for example: The US may implement IMT2000 at around 700MHz China prefers the range 2300 2400MHz for IMT2000 (and possibly its own standard)
Telecoms
Informa
Telecoms
800
SS
1710 1885 1980 2010 2025 2110 2170 2200 2500
900
SS
1000 1700
1800
1900
2000
2100
2200
2500
2600
2700
2690
806
960
freq (kHz)
ITU
IMT 2000
IMT 2000
IMT 2000
M S S IMT 2000
M IMT S 2000 S
IMT 2000
WRC 2000
1710 1880 1920 1980 2010 2025 2110 2120 2200
WRC 2000
WARC 92
WARC 92
WRC 2000
890
960
Europe
GSM 900
UMTS SAT
Japan
1850 1910 1930 1910
USA
CELLULAR
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