Wednesday, 9 February 2011
FlashLinq: A P2P Network For Nearby Phones
Tuesday, 8 February 2011
VoLTE: Semi-Persistent Scheduling (SPS) and TTI Bundling
The example in Figure above can be applied to both the DL and UL and note that as long as there are speech packets arriving (i.e. a talk spurt) at the transmitter, the SPS PRBs would be dedicated to the user. Once speech packets stop arriving (i.e. silence period), these PRB resources can be re-assigned to other users. When the user begins talking again, a new SPS set of PRBs would be assigned for the duration of the new talkspurt. Note that dynamic scheduling of best effort data can occur on top of SPS, but the SPS allocations would take precedent over any scheduling conflicts.
Monday, 7 February 2011
'EU-Alert' in Release-11
In the recently concluded 3GPP CT-50 in Istanbul, EU-Alert was adopted as part of Rel-11. The EU-Alert is introduced under Public Warning System (PWS) in parallel with Earthquake and Tsunami Warning System (ETWS).Sunday, 6 February 2011
Dilbert Humour: Why your software contains bugs
Thursday, 3 February 2011
4G Mobile Broadband Evolution: 3GPP Release-10 and Beyond
Wednesday, 2 February 2011
Making small purchases simpler with Ericsson IPX
Tuesday, 1 February 2011
6th ETSI Security Workshop
Monday, 31 January 2011
Wireless Friendly Buildings
Saturday, 29 January 2011
Making of the Qualcomm Museum
Thursday, 27 January 2011
Attocell: Smaller Femtocell
Over the last year Femtocells et al. have been slowly rebranded as Small cells and I agree that it is a much more generic term and easier for end users to understand.
A few years back, I blogged about how Femtocells can be used to steal the spectrum. Well, Attocell legally allows to do just that. The press release states the following:The attocell connects to a user’s laptop via USB, which provides power and an internet connection. It then analyses the IP address and radio environment to determine which country it is in, and sets its 3G radio power accordingly to below the licenced level. In some countries its range will be just 5mm, in other countries, it could cover a whole room.
Like Ubiquisys femtocells, the attocell continuously monitors its radio environment to ensure that there is zero impact on existing mobile networks. This intelligence, combined with its tiny power output, is likely to make the attocell exempt from regulatory controls and the requirement for type approval.
In 5mm mode, the traveller simply lays the iPhone on top of the device and the phone connects automatically, just like a regular femtocell. Calls can be made using a Bluetooth or wired headset , or by using the iPhone’s speaker.
