Friday, April 29, 2011
Service Layer Optimization element to Improve Utilisation of Network Capacity
Wednesday, April 27, 2011
Possible Release-12 features
Tuesday, April 26, 2011
3GPP Standards Update for FemtoZone during MWC 2011
3GPP Standards Update - Adrian Scrase (16/02/2011) from ETSI – World Class Standards on Vimeo.
The presentation is embedded below:
Monday, April 25, 2011
Advanced Telephony Services for LTE
Sunday, April 24, 2011
ANDSF: Access Network Discovery and Selection Function
WeFi has launched a product that is intended to enable mobile operators to route traffic over the mobile macro network or a WiFi hotspot without the consumer having to manage their own settings.
The product, from WeFi, enables operators to set network management policies using a 3GPP-defined function for the Evolved Packet Core called ANDSF – Access Network Discovery and Selection Function. WeFi said that its WeANDSF is the first standards-compliant product on the market, although it said that as the standards are not yet fully finalised, the product is more accurately described as a pre-standards compliant product.
ANDSF, specified in 3GPP standards 23.402 and 24.312, is intended to allow mobile operators to set network management policies and priorities, and to control where, when and under what circumstances a subscriber’s device connects to which wireless network, be it cellular or Wi-Fi.
Operators may choose to route traffic according to application type to reduce network load, or to provide the best available customer experience. Although operators are increasingly looking at using WiFi for offload in congested areas, one problem for them is that once traffic is routed over WiFi control is lost over any traffic policies they have set for that user. ANDSF keeps a link to the operator's core network, allowing the operator visibility of traffic even when it is routed over WiFi.
WeFi said that the product is already in trials with several mobile operators. As handset manufacturers are yet to include the device element of ANDSF, WeFi is also providing a device client, although it sees that role diminishing as handset vendors deliver ANDSF-compliant handsets, “when these become available in the market by 2012”.
The following presentation is by Fraunhofer Fokus on ANDSF:For more details see:
Tuesday, April 19, 2011
Unstructured Supplementary Service Data (USSD) simulation service in IMS (USSI)
Monday, April 18, 2011
Multimedia Telephony (MMTel) in 3GPP Rel-7
Thursday, April 14, 2011
Smart Grids (again)
On 17 March, game designers at the Institute for the Future, in collaboration with us at IEEE Spectrum, ran a 24-hour forecasting game called Smart Grid 2025. Weenlisted the help of listeners like you and game players around the world to brainstorm solutions to the problems the smart grid will face. That way, by 2025—when all our homes have smart meters and utilities are linking up wind farms and solar plants to national grids—it'll be running as smoothly as it possibly can.
Steven Cherry's guest is Jake Dunagan, the game's project leader at the Institute for the Future in Palo Alto, Calif. He was on this show in early March in advance of the Smart Grid 2025 game to talk about how it would work, and now he's back to tell how it went.
This interview was recorded 4 April 2011. (Listen below)
But it's still early days for smart grid deployment. In fact, today, the smart grid still raises more questions than it answers—questions like, who will profit from the smart grid? How do we keep the smart grid from knowing too much about our personal lives? Is the smart grid dangerously hackable? Will the smart grid force you to do your laundry at night? Will the smart grid make us healthier? What kind of appliances are needed to accommodate the smart grid?
Wednesday, April 13, 2011
User Data Convergence (UDC) in Release 9 and its evolution
Monday, April 11, 2011
LTE World Summit 2011 promising to be bigger than ever
Sunday, April 10, 2011
Cognitive radio – the way out of spectrum crunch?
Thursday, April 7, 2011
Nice presentation on GPS, Geotagging and its Future
Wednesday, April 6, 2011
Mobile Phone Antennas and Networks
It is estimated that the RF performance of iPhone4 is around 6dB worse than most other 3G phones. What this means is that you may be getting 4 bars of reception on your other phone where iPhone4 may be having only 1 or 2 bars or reception. So if the reception is poor with 1 or 2 bars, iPhone4 may have no reception at all.