THE
GPRS
The General Packet Radio Service
(GPRS) is a new non-voice value
added service that allows information
to be sent and received across
a mobile telephone network.
It supplements today's Circuit
Switched Data and Short Message
Service. It is a step ahead
to provide a massive boost to
mobile data usage and usefulness.
Payments are made as per data
volume, instead of per minute
pulse rate. You need to pay
a fixed rent around Rs. 750
per month, after which you can
surf for unlimited hours. Except
for one thing, as a developing
technology, the net connection
is a slow process.
BENEFITS
Surfing the net; emailing;
all through the mobile.
Fast transmission of text documents,
spreadsheets, photographs and
illustrations; mobile chatting
and on-line games.
A round the
clock net connection, even when
you are on the move.
FEATURES
SPEED
A GPRS can achieve speeds up
to 171.2 kilobits per second
(kbps) using all eight timeslots
at the same time. This is thrice
as fast as current data transmission
systems.
IMMEDIACY
GPRS facilitates instant connections
whereby information can be sent
or received immediately as the
need arises, subject to radio
coverage. No dial-up modem connection
is necessary.
NEW
APPLICATIONS, BETTER APPLICATIONS
GPRS facilitates several new
applications that have not previously
been available over GSM networks
due to the limitations in speed
of Circuit Switched Data (9.6
kbps) and message length of
the Short Message Service (160
characters). GPRS will fully
enable the Internet applications
you are used to on your desktop
from web browsing to chat over
the mobile network.
WHAT
DO YOU NEED FOR A GPRS ?
To begin with, a mobile phone
or terminal that supports GPRS.
A subscription to a mobile telephone
network that supports GPRS.
§ Knowledge of how to send and/
or receive GPRS information
using their specific model of
mobile phone, including software
and hardware configuration.
A destination
to send or receive information
through GPRS. Whereas with SMS
this was often another mobile
phone, in the case of GPRS,
it is likely to be an Internet
address, since GPRS is designed
to make the Internet fully available
to mobile users for the first
time.
KEY
NETWORK FEATURES OF GPRS
PACKET SWITCHING GPRS
involves overlaying a packet
based air interface on the existing
circuit switched GSM network.
This gives the user an option
to use a packet-based data service.
With GPRS, the information is
split into separate but related
"packets" before being transmitted
and reassembled at the receiving
end.
SPECTRUM
EFFICIENCY
Efficient use of scarce radio
resources means that large numbers
of GPRS users can potentially
share the same bandwidth and
be served from a single cell.
The actual number of users supported
depends on the application being
used and how much data is being
transferred. Because of the
spectrum efficiency of GPRS,
there is less need to build
in idle capacity that is only
used in peak hours. GPRS therefore
lets network operators maximise
the use of their network resources
in a dynamic and flexible way,
along with user access to resources
and revenues.
INTERNET
AWARE
GPRS fully enables Mobile Internet
functionality by allowing inter-working
between the existing Internet
and the new GPRS network.
LIMITATIONS
OF GPRS
LIMITED CELL CAPACITY
FOR ALL USERS
There are only limited radio
resources that can be deployed
for different uses- use for
one purpose precludes simultaneous
use for another. For example,
voice and GPRS calls both use
the same network resources.
The extent of the impact depends
upon the number of timeslots,
if any, that are reserved for
exclusive use of GPRS.
SPEEDS
MUCH LOWER IN REALITY
Achieving the theoretical maximum
GPRS data transmission speed
of 171.2 kbps would require
a single user taking over all
eight timeslots without any
error protection. Additionally,
the initial GPRS terminals are
expected to be severely limited-
supporting only one, two or
three timeslots. The bandwidth
available to a GPRS user will
therefore be severely limited.
APPLICATIONS
OF GPRS
A wide range of corporate and
consumer applications are enabled
by nonvoice mobile services
such as SMS and GPRS.
CHAT
Because of its synergy with
the Internet, GPRS would allow
mobile users to participate
fully in existing Internet chat
groups rather than needing to
set up their own groups that
are dedicated to mobile users.
Since the number of participants
is an important factor determining
the value of participation in
the newsgroup, the use of GPRS
here would be advantageous.
TEXTUAL
AND VISUAL INFORMATION
You can receive information,
which is in the form of not
only text, but maps, graphs
or other visuals.
STILL
IMAGES
Still images such as photographs,
pictures, postcards, greeting
cards and presentations, static
web pages can be sent and received
over the mobile network as they
are across fixed telephone networks.
It will be possible with GPRS
to post images from a digital
camera connected to a GPRS radio
device directly to an Internet
site, allowing near real-time
desktop publishing.
MOVING
IMAGES
You will also be able to receive
moving images and receive transmission
from anywhere.
WEB
BROWSING
You will also be able to use
the GPRS for browsing the net.
DOCUMENT SHARING/ COLLABORATIVE
WORKING Mobile data facilitates
document sharing and remote
collaborative working. This
lets different people in different
places work on the same document
at the same time.
AUDIO
Dictating to a mobile phone,
would simply not give sufficient
voice quality to allow transmission
to be broadcast or analyzed
for the purposes of background
noise analysis or voice printing.
Since even short voice clips
occupy large file sizes, GPRS
or other high speed mobile data
services are needed.
JOB
DISPATCH
Non-voice mobile services can
be used to assign and communicate
new jobs from office-based staff
to mobile field staff. Customers
typically telephone a call center
whose staff take the call and
categorize it. Those calls requiring
a visit by field sales or service
representative can then be escalated
to those mobile workers.
CORPORATE
EMAIL
With up to half of employees
typically away from their desks
at any one time, it is important
for them to keep in touch with
the office by extending the
use of corporate email systems
beyond an employee's office
PC. Since GPRS capable devices
will be more widespread in corporations
than amongst the general mobile
phone user community, there
are likely to be more corporate
email applications using GPRS
than Internet email ones whose
target market is more general.
INTERNET
EMAIL
Internet email services come
in the form of a gateway service
where the messages are not stored,
or mailbox services in which
messages are stored. In the
case of gateway services, the
wireless email platform simply
translates the message from
SMTP, the Internet email protocol,
into SMS and sends to the SMS
Center. In the case of mailbox
email services, the emails are
actually stored and the user
gets a notification on their
mobile phone and can then retrieve
the full email by dialing in
to collect it, forward it and
so on.
By linking Internet email with
an alert mechanism such as SMS
or GPRS, users can be notified
when a new email is received.
REMOTE
LAN ACCESS
Remote LAN applications encompasses
access to any applications that
an employee would use when sitting
at their desk, such as access
to the intranet, their corporate
email services such as Microsoft
Exchange or Lotus Notes and
to database applications running
on Oracle or Sybase or whatever.
The mobile terminal such as
handheld or laptop computer
has the same software programs
as the desktop on it, or cut
down client versions of the
applications accessible through
the corporate LAN. This application
area is therefore likely to
be a conglomeration of remote
access to several different
information types- email, intranet,
databases. This information
may all be accessible through
web browsing tools, or require
proprietary software applications
on the mobile device. The ideal
bearer for Remote LAN Access
depends on the amount of data
being transmitted, but the speed
and latency of GPRS make it
ideal.
FILE
TRANSFER
You may download sizeable data
across the mobile network. This
data could be a presentation
document for a traveling salesperson,
an appliance manual for a service
engineer or a software application
such as Adobe Acrobat Reader
to read documents. The source
of this information could be
one of the Internet communication
methods such as FTP (File Transfer
Protocol), telnet, http or Java-
or from a proprietary database
or legacy platform. Irrespective
of source and type of file being
transferred, this kind of application
tends to be bandwidth intensive.
It therefore requires a high-speed
mobile data service such as
GPRS, EDGE or 3GSM to run satisfactorily
across a mobile network.
HOME
AUTOMATION
Home automation applications
combine remote security with
remote control. Basically, you
can monitor your home from wherever
you are- on the road, on holiday,
or at the office. If your burglar
alarm goes off, not only do
you get alerted, but you get
to go live and see who are perpetrators
are and perhaps even lock them
in. You can program your video,
switch your oven on so that
the preheating is complete by
the time you arrive home and
so on. Your GPRS capable mobile
phone really does become like
the remote control devices we
use today for our television,
video, hi-fi and so on. As the
Internet Protocol (IP) will
soon be everywhere- not just
in mobile phones because of
GPRS but all manner of household
appliances and in every machine-
these devices can be addressed
and instructed. A key enabler
for home automation applications
will be Bluetooth, which allows
disparate devices to inter work.
WHAT
IS BLUETOOTH TECHNOLOGY ?
Bluetooth, named after
the renowned Danish King, Harold
Bluetooth, is a short-range
wireless connectivity standard.
Bluetooth is capturing the minds
of the present day technologists,
as a technology enabler for
the wireless unification of
a wide variety of portable devices
like mobile PCs, mobile phones
and the like. It does away with
the cables and enables voice
and data transfer between the
devices through wireless networks
called piconets.
The primary segments identified
for Bluetooth application are:
Cellular & PCS Mobile Phones,
Digital Cordless Phones, Data
Access Points, PC Cards and
Adapters , Notebook & Desktop
PCs, Handheld PCs & Palm
Companions / PDA s, Digital
Still Cameras, Output Equipment,
Automotive and Industrial &
Medical applications.
The
technology behind it:
Bluetooth is a Radio Frequency
(RF) specification for short-range,
point-to-multi-point voice and
data transfer. An advantage
of Bluetooth is it's similarity
to many other specifications
already deployed and it's borrowing
of many a feature from these
specifications. The 2.4GHz band
is used by IEEE 802.11 to enable
wireless LAN connectivity. Bluetooth
borrows specifications to enable
file sharing and data transfers
between devices from IrDA (a
wireless specification that
uses InfraRed light to connect
devices). HomeRF SWAP, a specification
aimed at small network of devices
for the home environment, is
another source for Bluetooth.
It is omni-directional and has
a present nominal link range
of 10cm to 10m, which can be
extended to 100m, with increased
transmitting power. Bluetooth
operates in the 2.4GHz Industrial-Scientific-Medical
(ISM) Band and uses a Frequency
Hop (FH) spread spectrum technology
in which packets are transmitted
in defined time slots on defined
frequencies. A full duplex information
interchange rate of upto 1Mbps
may be achieved in which a Time-Division
Duplex (TDD) scheme is used.
A
Bluetooth System:
A Radio Unit - consisting of
a radio transceiver, which provides
the radio, link between the
Bluetooth devices.
A Baseband Unit - a hardware
consisting of flash memory and
a CPU. This interfaces with
the radio unit and the host
device electronics.
Link Management Software - a
driver software or firmware
which enables the application
software to interface with the
baseband unit.
An Application Software - this
implements the user interface
and is the application that
can run on wireless.
BLUE
TOOTH USAGE MODELS
The usage model being
presented below are those which
have been identified by the
Bluetooth SIG's marketing group
and helps us to get a peep into
the vast areas of application
of this wonderful standard.
The
three-in-one phone:
It can work as cordless phones
connecting to the public switched
telephone network at home and
office and thus incurring the
fixed line charge. It could
function as a walkie-talkie
with other telephones in the
same office or building, without
incurring any charge. This telephone
can also connect to the cellular
infrastructure and function
as a cellular phone, incurring
cellular charges. At home, your
phone functions as a portable
phone (fixed line charge). When
you're on the move, it functions
as a mobile phone (cellular
charge). And when your phone
comes within range of another
mobile phone with built-in Bluetooth
wireless technology, it functions
as a walkie-talkie (no telephony
charge).
The
Internet Bridge:
In this usage model, mobile
phone or cordless modem functions
as a modem to the PC, providing
dial-up networking and fax capabilities
without a need for physical
connection to the PC. Use your
mobile computer to surf the
Internet wherever you are, and
regardless of whether you're
cordlessly connected through
a mobile phone (cellular) or
through a wire-bound connection
(e.g. PSTN, ISDN, LAN, xDSL).
The
Interactive Conference:
Here, multiple data terminals,
use a Local Access Network (LAN)
access point as a wireless connection
to a LAN. Once connected, the
data terminals operate as if
they were connected to the LAN
via dialup networking. The terminals
can access all of the services
provided by the LAN. In meetings
and conferences you can transfer
selected documents instantly
with selected participants,
and exchange electronic business
cards automatically, without
any wired connections.
The file transfer usage model
offers the ability to transfer
data objects from one device
to another. Object types include,
among others, ***.xls,***.ppt,***.wav,***.jpg,***.doc
files or entire folders, directories
or streaming data formats. Also,
this offers a possibility to
browse the contents of the folders
on a remote device.
The
Ultimate Headset:
The Headset, can be wirelessly
connected for the purpose of
acting as a remote device's
audio input and output interface
.The headset increases the freedom
of movement while maintaining
privacy. The headset can be
typically used with a cellular
headset, cordless handset or
personal computer for audio
input and output. This headset
will also have the ability to
answer incoming calls and then
terminate them without physically
manipulating the telephone handset.
Connect your wireless headset
to your mobile phone, mobile
computer or any wired connection
to keep your hands free for
more important tasks when you're
at the office or in your car.
The
Automatic Synchronizer:
This provides a device-to-device
synchronization of the personal
information management (PIM)
information. Synchronization
requires business card, calendar
and task information to be transferred
and processed by computers,
cellular phones and PDA s, utilizing
a common protocol and format.
This involves, automatic synchronization
of your desktop, mobile computer,
notebook (PC-PDA and PC-HPC)
and your mobile phone. For instance,
as soon as you enter your office,
the address list and calendar
in your notebook will automatically
be updated to agree with the
one in your desktop, or vice
versa.
IRDA
AND BLUETOOTH
IrDA-Data (IrDA -> Infra-red
Data Association) is another
short-range wireless connectivity
standard with an installed base
of 50 million units, by now.
IrDA is a point-to-point, narrow
angle (30 degree cone), ad-hoc
transmission standard designed
to operate over a distance of
0 to 1 meter and at speeds of
9.6kbps to 4Mbps, which is expected
to increase to 16Mbps.
While the application areas
of Bluetooth and IrDA overlap,
they are not competitive standards,
necessarily. The short range,
narrow angle of IrDA allows
the user to aim, in point-and-shoot
style at a targeted recipient,
for example in a conference
hall. Close proximity to the
other person is natural in a
business card exchange situation
and the short range is an advantage
of IrDA for such applications.
The directional nature of IR
enables a low level security
because of direct line-of-sight
nature; but it provides for,
no security at the link level.
There are security loopholes
as it is possible to eavesdrop
on a conversation by detecting
reflected light and filtering
out the surrounding ambient
noise.
In contrast, Bluetooth addresses
the security concerns by providing
authentication and encryption
in its baseband protocol. Authentication
relies on a challenge-response
protocol utilizing a secret
key, personal identification
number or PIN. Bluetooth devices
talking to one another should
have the same PIN. The protocol
allows each device to authenticate
the other. After the devices
are authenticated it is possible
to encrypt the transmission
for added security.
Thus, it is expected that while
in some devices both IR and
Bluetooth may co-exist, for
the other applications, the
choice of Bluetooth and IR will
be based on the applications
and required usage models.
Mind-boggling technology like
the Bluetooth and GPRS, is on
its way to make communications
in the future, a completely
different ball game. A ball
game with a win-win situation.
Pave way for the future with
these technologies then.
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