Monday, 17 December 2012
2 Presentations on Mobile technology Security
Labels:
3GPP,
Backhaul,
EPS,
GPRS,
GSM,
IMS,
LTE,
Relays,
Security,
Small Cells,
Standards,
Technical Details,
UMTS
Saturday, 15 December 2012
Spectrum auction results from The Netherlands

The result of the auction:
800 | 900 | 1800 | 2100 | 1900 | 2600 | |
KPN | 2x10 | 2x10 | 2x20 | 2x5 | 30 | |
Vodafone | 2x10 | 2x10 | 2x20 | 2x5 | ||
T-Mobile | 2x15 | 2x30 | 4,9+9,7 | 25 | ||
Tele2 | 2x10 |
The total price of the auction:
- Vodafone 1,380,800,000 euro (1.381 billion)
- KPN 1,351,852,000 euros (1.352 billion)
- T-Mobile 910,681,000 euro (910.8 million)
- Tele2 euro 160,813,000 (160.8 million)
After the auction is the distribution of the main bands is as follows:
800 | 900 no | 900 new | 1800 no | 1800 new | 2100 no | 2100 new | 2600 | |
KPN | 2x10 | 2x12,4 | 2x10 | 2x18,4 | 2x20 | 2x15 | 2x20 | 2x10 |
Vodafone | 2x10 | 2x12,4 | 2x10 | 2x4,8 | 2x20 | 2x15 | 2x20 | 2x10 |
T-Mobile | 2x10 | 2x15 | 2x30,6 | 2x30 | 2x20 | 2x20 | 2x5 | |
Tele2 | 2x10 | - | - | - | - | - | - | 2x20 |
TO | - | - | - | - | - | - | 2x20 |
Sources:
Vodafone - Summer 2013
KPN - February 2013
Added 15/12/12:11.48
You can also see it visually as in the slide below:
Thursday, 13 December 2012
Half Duplex Operation (HD-FDD) in LTE
It was interesting to hear the other day that there is an option for HD-FDD but it is still undergoing investigation and not standardised yet. From what I hear, operators are showing an interest and we may see it coming to an operator near us in the next couple of years.
Complete presentation below:
The advantages are obvious but probably the only reason this was not standardised actively is probably because then peak rates often quoted when promoting technology will be halved. The economy of scale is also important and we may not see this becoming popular unless many operators decide together to push for this.
Other posts of interest:
- Quick Introduction to LTE-Advanced
- Quick update on 3GPP Release-12 progress
- TD-LTE in China: Progress and Plan
Labels:
Cambridge Wireless (CW),
LTE,
Technical Details
Tuesday, 11 December 2012
"Small Cells" - An introduction for beginners
A good starting point for beginners on Small Cells:
Related links:
Related links:
- Small Cells: Comparison and Deployment Scenarios
- Whats inside a Picocell?
- Building the World’s Largest Residential Small-Cell network
- ‘Small Cells’ and the City
- ‘Proximity Marketing’ and ‘Location Based Services’ (LBS) using ‘Small Cells’
- Radio Challenges and Opportunities for Large Scale Small Cell Deployments
Monday, 10 December 2012
Sunday, 9 December 2012
Improvements to GSM, GPRS and EDGE to interact with the LTE experience
Wednesday, 5 December 2012
Quick update on 3GPP Release-12 progress
Some months back, I blogged about the 3GPP Rel-12 workshop, since then there has been progress on the Rel-12 features. Here is a quick update from 3GPP:
You can download the PPT from Slideshare.
Other related posts:
You can download the PPT from Slideshare.
Other related posts:
Labels:
3GPP,
LTE-Advanced,
Release 12,
Small Cells
Tuesday, 4 December 2012
5 videos on Augmented Reality
Looks like Augmented Reality (AR) is getting hot, just in time for Christmas. I wonder how many products will be sold based on AR. As I suggested in an earlier post, there may be 1 Billion users by 2020. Here are the videos:
Google's Ingress is an AR baased game:
Augmented Reality Book of Spells, Harry Potter experience:
Wonder when/ever it will come to a mobile near you.
LightBeam - Interacting with Augmented Real-World Objects in Pico Projections:
The next is a bit old but worth mentioning:
LuminAR from MIT
Finally, the science of Haptics will allows us to "touch" objects in a virtual world in future
Augmented Reality and Touch
Google's Ingress is an AR baased game:
Augmented Reality Book of Spells, Harry Potter experience:
Wonder when/ever it will come to a mobile near you.
LightBeam - Interacting with Augmented Real-World Objects in Pico Projections:
The next is a bit old but worth mentioning:
LuminAR from MIT
Finally, the science of Haptics will allows us to "touch" objects in a virtual world in future
Augmented Reality and Touch
Labels:
Apps,
AR / VR / MR / XR,
Future Technologies,
Videos
Sunday, 2 December 2012
Components of a BTS Site - nice pic
Labels:
Antennas,
GSM,
Network Architecture
Saturday, 1 December 2012
Data growth from 0.6EB/Mo to 10.6EB/Mo by 2016 (18x)
A slightly old slide that I found while looking for some information but worth putting up here.
As we can see, Cisco predicts (and I agree) that the mobile data consumption will increase from 0.6 exabytes per month to 10.6 exabytes per month by 2016. What is really debatable is what actually is a mobile device and how much of this data will go through the operators network.
If for example a tablet contains SIM card but you use your own home/work WiFi. Does this qualify as a mobile device and is this data included. What if its exactly the same scenario and the device does not have a SIM card then would you say this is a mobile device? What happens when the operator allows you to use an Operator WiFi which is secured via login/password and you use the tablet without SIM card on an operator WiFi. Would you count this data, is the device considered as a mobile device.
The bottom line is that data usage will continue to grow but probably not on the mobile networks. WiFi would be a prime candidate for offloading, due to it being mostly free (or costing much less - except in the hotels). Some of the recent pricing by the operators make me feel that they do not want the users to use their network for every day use, only for important work.
See Also:
- Operators strategy for supporting the ‘Mobile Data Explosion’
- Cellular or WiFi: Which is the preferred network access?
- Data Consumed by Different Streaming Applications
- A Twitter discussion on 'Data Tsunami' myth
- How Mobile Broadband users use their data allowance
- Understanding smartphone traffic
Labels:
Cisco,
Data Traffic Management,
Mobile Data,
Stats
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