MOBILE COMMUNICATION PRESENTED BY:- NISHANT CHIKHALE SANTOSH KAWALE ASHISH UMALE MAYUR HULKE KUNDAN NANDANWAR.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Mobile Phone Technologies Evolution
Advertisements

ALT CENTRE A L T T C PART I A Brief History PART II Cellular Concepts PART III GSM- Radio Interface CELLULAR MOBILE RADIO.
Transmission technology William Kemp. Infrared Infrared data travels in shorter (near infrared waves). These waves enable data to be sent and receive.
Wireless Network Taxonomy Wireless communication includes a wide range of network types and sizes. Government regulations that make specific ranges of.
M ain H eadings M ain H eadings Short History. Advantages. Disadvantages. Mob Communication in Pakistan.
4G Technology Presented By Nithin Raj. 4G Definition 4G is not one defined technology or standard, but rather a collection of technologies at creating.
Wireless and going mobile Browsing via low energy photons.
First Generation (1G) Alison Griffiths C203 Ext:3292
How do cell phone work? By Nelson Oduro ISC 110.
Chapter 8 COMMUNICATION AND COMPUTER NETWORK
SAMEER NETAM RAHUL GUPTA PAWAN KUMAR SINGH ONKAR BAGHEL OM PANKAJ EKKA Submitted By:
MOBILE PHONE ARCHITECTURE & TECHNOLOGY. HISTORY  The idea of the first cellular network was brainstormed in 1947  Disadvantages  All the analogue system.
SEMINAR ON GSM & CDMA PREPARED BY: ROKAD RAJESH V ROLL NO(6545) GUIDED BY:K.S.P.
AJIS (c) AJIS LLC, 2009Jonathan Wells, AJIS LLC 1 Introduction to Cellular Technology Jonathan Wells PhD MBA President, AJIS LLC.
1 Cellular communications Cellular communications BASIC TELECOMMUNICATIONS.
Presentation on Copyright (c) 2011 Presentation Point ( m)
Chi-Cheng Lin, Winona State University CS412 Introduction to Computer Networking & Telecommunication DSL, Cable, and Mobile Telephone System.
COSC Wireless Networks Bala Kalyanasundaram.
TDMA and GSM Union University Knowledge Set. Agenda TDMA Technology GSM Technology TDMA vs GSM TDMA Conversion The 3GSM Evolution Glossary of Terms.
COMMUNICATION GADGETS
COMMUNICATION SYSTEM (2) CT1401 LECTURE-9 : MOBILE PHONE BY : AFNAN ALAYYASH SUPERVISION : DR.OUIEM BCHIR.
Fall 2011 Patrick Johnson “The wireless telegraph is not difficult to understand. The ordinary telegraph is like a very long cat. You pull the.
KARTIK DABBIRU Roll # EE
3G Single Core Modem A New Telecommunications Device Group 4: Warren Irwin, Austin Beam, Amanda Medlin, Rob Westerman, Brittany Deardian.
1 Kyung Hee University Chapter 16 Wireless WANs: Cellular Telephone.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved BUSINESS PLUG-IN B21 Mobile Technology.
What will the Future Bring? By: Erin Merkel. Cell Phones are a major advantage in today’s society. Without the invention of this technology there would.
BY NEHA CHOUDHARY ASST. PROFFESSOR DEPT. OF CSE/IT LHST-A.
MOBILE COMMUNICATION G.S.M. & G.P.R.S.. Evolution of mobile telephone systems Cellular subscriber growth worldwide Currently more than 45 million cellular.
Copyright (c) 2011 Presentation Point (
© 2008 Pearson Prentice Hall, Electronic Commerce 2008, Efraim Turban, et al. Chapter 9 Mobile Computing and Commerce and Pervasive Computing.
+ 1.1 History and Background - Voice/ Telephony Services FM technology - Mobile Telephone Service (MTS) Introduced in 1946, it allowed telephone calls.
4G Mobile Communications. MOBILE SYSTEM GENERATION First Generation (1G) Mobile System:  The introduction of cellular systems in the late 1970s and early.
“ Getting to Know Networks”. What Is a Network? n A network is a collection of computers hooked up together, usually by cables or telephone wires, for.
AN INTRODUCTION TO (3G) ARIF KHAN.G CISCO N/W ASSOCIATE.
{ Transmission Media.  Information can be transmitted through a medium by varying some physical property.  The physics of the universe places some limits.
MASNET GroupXiuzhen ChengFeb 8, 2006 Terms and Concepts Behind Wireless Communications.
WIDEBAND CODE DIVISION MULTIPLE ACCESS & THE CAPACITY IN CODE DIVISION MULTIPLE ACCESS Presented by Maheshwarnath Behary Assisted by Vishwanee Raghoonundun.
GSM – formerly: Groupe Spéciale Mobile (founded 1982) – now: Global System for Mobile Communication – Pan-European standard (ETSI, European Telecommunications.
Cellular Communication SNSCE - CS2402 Mobile Pervasive Computing.
SEMINAR ON BLUETOOTH TECHNOLOGY
Wireless Telecommunications Networks personal area network (PAN) A wireless telecommunications network for device-to-device connections within a very short.
Business Driven Technology Unit 4 Building Innovation Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
WIRELESS SYSTEMS Adnan Iqbal MCS-MIT 1 1.
Presented by: Gurpreet Singh Assistant Professor Department of School of Computing and Engineering Galgotias University Cellular Communication.
Telephone and Telecommunication. Telephone - a device for transmitting and receiving sound at a distance. Modern phones are performed through the transmission.
Objective This presentation covers the Generation of Telecom Network Evolution. Basically the presentation aims on the evolution from 1G to 4G and some.
WHY WIRELESS COMMUNICATION?  Freedom from wires.  No bunch of wires running from here and there.  “Auto Magical” instantaneous communication without.
By: Chasity, Jamon, Clifton.  Computer networks have lots of pathways that send information back and forth.  Networks can even send the information.
Modern Mobile Technologies By: Vincent Verner. Overview Mobile hardware Generation speed standards How mobile networks work Current mobile security measures.
Cellular Networks 1. Overview 1G Analog Cellular 2G TDMA - GSM 2G CDMA - IS G 3G 4G and Beyond Cellular Engineering Issues 2.
Unit 4 Cellular Telephony
 Abbreviation of fourth generation wireless technology  It will provide a comprehensive IP solution where voice, data and multimedia can be given to.
4G Wireless Technology Prepared by K.Sai Kumar Yadav 07K81A0584.
ICT Unit 4: Network and the effects of using them
4G WIRELESS SYSTEM Presented By S. RAVINDER 06U61A0435.
A PRESENTATION ON VOCATIONAL TRAINING IN BSNL. 2 3-Jul-16 GSM (Global System For Mobile Communication) The Global System for Mobile communications (GSM:
4G TECHNOLOGIES SEVENTH SEMESTER COMPUTER & SCIENCE ENGG.. COMPUTER & SCIENCE ENGG..
5 G.
4G Technology.
Cellular Networks Wireless Transmission Cellular Concept
4G Wireless Systems A Seminar on Presented By: Sainik Kumar Mahata
Mobile Phone Techniques
The Internet and the World Wide Web
WIRELESS AND MOBILE COMMUNICATION
DIFFERENT TYPES OF INTERNET CONNECTIONS.
Cellular Telephone Networks
LM 7. Mobile Network Overview
The Physical Layer Chapters
Presentation transcript:

MOBILE COMMUNICATION PRESENTED BY:- NISHANT CHIKHALE SANTOSH KAWALE ASHISH UMALE MAYUR HULKE KUNDAN NANDANWAR

MAIN HEADINGS 1. INTRODUCTION 2. SHORT HISTORY 3. 1G OR FIRST GENERATION 4. 2G OR SECOND GENERATION 5. 3G OR THIRD GENERRATION 6. 4G OR FOURTH GENERATION 7. CELLULAR NETWORK 8. ANTENNA 9. MOBILE APPLICATION 10. CELLULAR PHONE SAFETY 11. BLUETOOTH 12. GPRS 13. SHORT MESSAGE SERVICE(SMS) 14. GSM SYSTEM 15. MULTIMEDIA MESSAGE 16. ADVANTAGES 17. DISADVANTAGES

INTRODUCTION 1. The role of cellular phones has risen with improvement in services, reduction in service costs and the ever increasing services available through cell phones.Mobile Internet access is a global phenomenon with even great implications.Leading phone manufacturers such as Ericsson, Motorola, and Nokia have put a great deal of marketing effort behind the mobile Internet phenomenon, recognizing that adoption is a complex business proposition. 2. The most modern telephone is the cellular telephone, or commonly called a cell phone. A cellular telephone is designed to give the user maximum freedom of movement while using a telephone.The number of mobile communication devices users is growing very fast.

SHORT HISTORY 1. It was basically started in Germany in In 1982 the European Conference of Postal and Telecommunications Administrations founded a working group.

SHORT HISTORY the Global System for Mobile (GSM) communications standard was available in Switzerland the first devices are presented. 3. In 1995 SMS was available.

1 G 1. 1G cellular systems refer to the early analogue cellular phone technologies. 2. The early 1980’s marked the first use of wireless cellular systems. It was typical for this kind of systems that the systems were quite limited. 3. 1G systems differed from the earlier radio networks in a couple of ways. The first generation (1G) cellular systems had increased capacity and greater mobility support than the early wireless radio networks. 4. The first generation of wireless consisted mostly of voice traffic handled with analog techniques.For example NMT and AMPS cellular technologies belong to this category.

2G 1. Second generation (2G) cellular phone system use digital communication methods. 2. The second generation (2G) wireless systems are characterized by the use of digital radio transmission. 3. Examples of this series of systems include GSM, D-AMPS (TDMA/IS-136) and CDMA IS-95-A.

3G 1. Third generation (3G) systems promise faster communications services, including voice, fax and Internet, anytime and anywhere with seamless global roaming. 2. ITU’s IMT-2000 global standard for 3G has opened the way to enabling innovative applications and services (e.g. multimedia entertainment, infotainment and location-based services, among others). 3. The first 3G network was devolped in Japan in G networks, such as GPRS (Global Packet Radio Service) are already available in some parts of Europe.

4G 1. 4G refers to the fourth generation of cellular wireless and is a successor to 3G and 2G standards.3G2G 2. The rest of this article associates 4G with International Mobile Telecommunications-Advanced (IMT Advanced), though 4G is a broader term and could include standards outside IMT- Advanced. 3. A 4G system may upgrade existing communication networks and is expected to provide a comprehensive and secure IP based solution where facilities such as voice, data and streamed multimedia will be provided to users on an "Anytime, Anywhere" basis and at much higher data rates compared to previous generations

CELLULAR NETWORK 1. The idea behind cellular networks is the sub-division of a geographical area covered by a network into a number of smaller areas called cells. The frequencies allocated to one cell can be reused in other cells that are far enough not to disturb. 2. A fixed radio station called as a base station within each cell acts as a transmitter/receiver serving all the mobile stations inside the cell area.A base station controls a group of transmitting/receiving frequencies allocated by the network to that cell.

ANTENNA 1. An antenna is fundamentally a transmission line that transforms information from electrical energy (current and voltage) into electromagnetic energy (RF waves) 2. Antennas are critical links in the wireless signal chain.Right antenna for the application yields a good signal coverage, increased S/N ratio, reduced bit error rate, and lower power consumption all at very low cost.As cellular telephones have evolved over the years, so have their components, particularly the antennas. Cellular phone used to have large external antennas, but nowadays most cellular phones use an internal antenna.

MOBILE APPLICATIONS 1. Secrets of the wireless elite: Mobile applications need scripting too! - Mobile game developer Tom Park believes that scripting for wireless devices is important for proficiency sake. And with the need to scale mobile applications across so many different platforms, proficiency is everything. Secrets of the wireless elite: Mobile applications need scripting too!

CELLULAR PHONE SAFETY 1. Cellular phones are electronic devices that commununicate with the ceullar system base station usign radio communications. This means that they contain both radio receiver and transmitter. 2. The transmitter cause RF field around the cellular phone. 3.. RF fields are non-ionizing radiations (NIR). ). Unlike X-rays and gamma rays, they are much too weak to break the bonds that hold molecules in cells together and, therefore, produce ionization. 4. RF fields may, however, produce different effects on biological systems such as cells, plants, animals, or human beings.

BLUETOOTH 1. Bluetooth is a short-range radio technology that connects portable devices such as cell phones, handheld devices and notebook computers. 2. The technology has a range of up to 10 meters and wirelessly transfers data at rates of up to 720 kilobits per second. 3. The technology was originally developed by Ericsson. Bluetooth is now a global specification for wireless connectivity

GPRS 1. GPRS is an extension of the GSM system, and uses the same channels, the same modulation, and the same network backbone as the existing GSM network. 2. GPRS is a general pocket radio service which is used such as a wireless internet and multimedia service. It is also known as GSM (INTERNET PROTOCOL)Because it will continue users directly to internet service provider.

SHORT MESSAGE SERVICE (SMS) 1. SMS is a bidirectional service for sending short alphanumeric (up to 160 bytes) messages in a store and forward fashion. 2. GSM Short Messages have a maximum length of 160 characters (from the SMS character set), or 140 octets. However, Short Messages can be concatenated to form longer messages.

GSM SYSTEM 1. The GSM system is the most widely used cellular technology in use in the world today. It has been a particularly successful cellular phone technology for a variety of reasons including the ability to roam worldwide with the certainty of being able to be able to operate on GSM networks in exactly the same way.

MULTIMEDIA MESSAGE 1. Multimedia Messaging is just around the corner. Multimedia Messaging Service (MMS) is a new prominent wireless standard for multimedia. The idea behind MMS is to enhance SMS type messagging to carry larger messages which can contain more text, images, sound and possibly animation. MMS is expected to become a very popular messaging service in the future in both today's GSM networks and 3G networks in the future.

ADVANTAGES 1. It is the fastest way to communicate all around the world. 2. The cost of messaging and talking to people wirelessly is significantly lower. 3. It helps everyone in there daily life and its becomes a very essential part of our life. 4. Mobile Technology is playing an increasing role in disaster awareness. 5. We can use MMS, GPRS, WAP etc Services.

1. Mobile phone addiction is a big social problem. 2. Emergence of mobile phones is losing good habits, such as punctuality 3. People use the phone while they are driving, and this can cause problems. 4. Symptoms caused by the radiation of mobile phones are one of the most argued problems. 5. Cyber bullying is also another issue among the disadvantages of mobile phones. DISADVANTAGES

THANK YOU