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Project: IEEE P802.15 Working Group for Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPANs)
Submission Title: [WPAN Positioning] Date Submitted: [19 Sep 2005] Source: [Ian Gifford] Company [Freescale] Address [] Voice:[ ], FAX: [], Re: [UWB Forum Liaison] Abstract: [Short contribution on my thoughts on WPAN roadmapping and how to position the WNG.] Purpose: [Precursor overview and benchmark what is going with regard to other 802 and non 802 wireless WG/TG/SC, wireless SG, and WNG activities. The purpose is to request the SCwng members to be active wrt liaisons both internal and external to the SC.] Notice: This document has been prepared to assist the IEEE P It is offered as a basis for discussion and is not binding on the contributing individual(s) or organization(s). The material in this document is subject to change in form and content after further study. The contributor(s) reserve(s) the right to add, amend or withdraw material contained herein. Release: The contributor acknowledges and accepts that this contribution becomes the property of IEEE and may be made publicly available by P September 2005 Gifford, Freescale
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IEEE 802.15 WPAN SCwng Wireless Next Generation Standing Committee
September 2005 IEEE WPAN SCwng Wireless Next Generation Standing Committee Gifford, Freescale
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Content Overview of pitch How we got here Where we are
September 2005 Content Overview of pitch How we got here Short summary of the IEEE history Where we are Short summary of the IEEE status Where we are going overview and benchmark what is going with regard to (wrt) to other 802 and non 802 wireless WG/TG/SC, wireless SG, and WNG activities Gifford, Freescale
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September 2005 Overview of the pitch SCwng should focus here but needs to be aware of Gifford, Freescale
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September 2005 history The idea started in July 1997 in Nashua NH USA during an IEEE PASC Plenary Session. The WPAN™ effort focuses on the development of consensus standards for Personal Area Networks or short distance wireless networks. These WPANs address wireless networking of portable and mobile computing devices such as PCs, Personal Digital Assistants (PDAs), peripherals, cell phones, pagers, and consumer electronics; allowing these devices to communicate and interoperate with one another. The goal is to publish standards, recommended practices, or guides that have broad market applicability and deal effectively with the issues of coexistence and interoperability with other wired and wireless networking solutions. Gifford, Freescale
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802.15 today Published Active Task Groups IEEE Std 802.15.1™-2002
September 2005 today Published IEEE Std ™-2002 IEEE Std ™-2005 IEEE Std ™-2003 IEEE Std ™-2003 IEEE Std ™-2003 Active Task Groups P a, .3b, & .3c P a & .4b P Gifford, Freescale
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802.15 Future? Source: gsc10_grsc3_05 ITU-R_EMF.ppt September 2005
Gifford, Freescale
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September 2005 positioning The original IEEE 802 Wireless Standards Positioning vs. Data Rates and Mobility Chart Gifford, Freescale
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802.15.3a position…humor September 2005 Merged Proposal #1
Trench Merged Proposal #2 Trench Gifford, Freescale
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WPAN positioning PAN LAN MAN WAN Short-range devices 3/4G mobile
Month 2002 doc.: IEEE /xxxr0 September 2005 WPAN positioning PAN LAN MAN WAN Short-range devices 3/4G mobile IMT-2000 WLAN WMAN RFID ITS UWB Indication of scale of the areas in which wireless connectivity could be available; [also shows some terminology associated with the related technologies] PAN – LAN – MAN – WAN Short-range devices; thrust towards wireless connection with personal devices, e.g. UWB replacing wires; cars – ITS WiFi – now commonly deployed, e.g. private houses, hot-spots Wider area networks – emphasis on broadband within a large area, e.g. metropolitan area Even wider possibilities through cellular networks – looking to 3G and systems beyond 3G. Source: gsc10_grsc3_05 ITU-R_EMF.ppt Gifford, Freescale John Doe, His Company
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WPAN positioning (cont) Data Rate vs. Range
September 2005 WPAN positioning (cont) Data Rate vs. Range 10Gbps a UWB 1Gbps 802.11n 100Mbps Data Rate 802.16d 802.11a 802.11g 10Mbps 802.11b 802.20 HSDPA 1xEV-DO 1xEV-DV 1Mbps 100kbs WCDMA Cdma2000-1x GSM/GPRS/EDGE 10kbs a UWB 1m 10m 100m 1000m 10000m Distance in meters = Standards and commercial products available = Standards available, no commercial products = Standards under development Gifford, Freescale
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WPAN positioning (cont) Areas vs Standards
Month 2002 doc.: IEEE /xxxr0 September 2005 WPAN positioning (cont) Areas vs Standards IEEE 802 ETSI WAN UMTS, EDGE (GSM) WiMAX* MAN HiperMAN & HiperAccess IEEE WirelessMAN LAN HiperLAN/2 RLAN IEEE WirelessLAN Wi-Fi* ETSI HIPERMAN following 256 OFDM mode of a PAN WiMedia* Bluetooth* UWB Forum* ZigBee Alliance* IEEE WirelessPAN ETSI BRAN Source: gsc10_grsc3_16 ETSI BRAN.ppt *Industry fora for promotion and certfication Gifford, Freescale John Doe, His Company
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WPAN positioning (cont) Wireless Broadband Technologies
September 2005 WPAN positioning (cont) Wireless Broadband Technologies 1x-EV-DO Rev 0 1x-EV-DO Rev A 1x-EV-DO Rev B 3GPP2 Standards cdmaOne IS-95A/B Cdma2000-1x 1xRTT cdma2000-1x Rev C/D CDMA2000 -1x Rev E 3GPP Standards GSM/GPRS GSM/GPRS GSM/GPRS GSM/GPRS HSDPA Rel. 6+1 IEEE Standards 802.11n 802.11b Wi-Fi 802.11a 802.11g ZigBee Bluetooth WiMedia a a UWB Forum WiMax 802.16d 802.16e 802.20 Gifford, Freescale
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WPAN positioning (cont) Systems beyond IMT-2000
September 2005 WPAN positioning (cont) Systems beyond IMT-2000 Systems beyond IMT-2000 will encompass the capabilities of previous systems ITU-R M.BWA: IEEE e Mobility Mobility New capabilities of systems beyond ITU-R F.BWA: IEEE HiperMAN/ACCESS WCDMA HSDPA High High New Mobile Access cdma2000 1x EV- DO Enhanced EV- DV Enhanced IMT IMT - - 2000 2000 IMT - 2000 IMT-2000 Dashed line indicates that the exact data rates associated with systems beyond IMT-2000 are not yet determined Enhancement Enhancement WMAN NWA New Nomadic / Local Low Low Area Wireless Access 1 1 10 10 100 100 1000 1000 Peak Useful Data Rate (Mb/s) Peak Useful Data Rate (Mb/s) IEEE a/b/g HIPERLAN Source: gsc10_grsc3_02 Global BWA activities in ITU_R.ppt interconnection Digital Broadcast Systems Nomadic / Local Area Access Systems Gifford, Freescale
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5 Forces Driving WPAN Competiton…
September 2005 Potential Entrants Threat of new entrants WPAN Competitors Rivalry Among Existing 802 WGs Bargaining power of “suppliers” Bargaining power of “buyers” Potential Entrants Potential Entrants Threat of substitute standards and specifications or services Potential Entrants Gifford, Freescale
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Structures in standardization…
September 2005 NATIONAL BODIES ISO JTC1 CEN IEC ITU CENELEC ETSI ADMINISTRATIONS INDUSTRY, USERS ETC. Gifford, Freescale
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SDO, Consortia, Fora, etc…
September 2005 SDO, Consortia, Fora, etc… Gifford, Freescale
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The 802.15 WPAN SCwng should liaise with as many groups as possible?
September 2005 The WPAN SCwng should liaise with as many groups as possible? Internal 802.1, , , , , External SDOs Consortia Etc. ETSI’s GSC? WWRF? Gifford, Freescale
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Global Standards Collaboration (GSC) aka ETSI
September 2005 Global Standards Collaboration (GSC) aka ETSI GSC GSC10 28 August to 2 September 2005 Sophia Antipolis, France Global Standards Collaboration (GSC) is composed of the Global Telecommunications Standards Collaboration (GTSC) and Global Radio Standards Collaboration (GRSC): GRSC: GSC11 GSC#11 will be held in Chicago, USA 28 May - 2 June 2006 (Hosted by TIA) Gifford, Freescale
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Wireless World Research Forum (WWRF)
September 2005 Wireless World Research Forum (WWRF) WWRF WWRF14 07-08 July 2005 San Diego California WWRF15 08-09 December 2005 Paris, France Gifford, Freescale
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Thank You! Mercie Danke gracias Grazie Arigato Kamsa Hamaida Xie_Xie
September 2005 Thank You! Mercie Danke gracias Grazie Arigato Kamsa Hamaida Xie_Xie Shukriya Thoinks, Moite Cheers Gifford, Freescale
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WPAN frequency and spectrum management issues are equally important.
September 2005 Backup WPAN frequency and spectrum management issues are equally important. Gifford, Freescale
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September 2005 Map of ITU regions Gifford, Freescale
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US Frequency Allocations
September 2005 US Frequency Allocations Gifford, Freescale
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Frequency Assignment of 5GHz Band in USA, Europe and Japan
September 2005 USA : GHz, GHz Europe : GHz, GHz Japan : GHz, GHz, GHz HIPERLAN 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 5.6 5.7 5.8 GHz International common band according to WRC-03 5.150 5.250 5.350 5.470 5.725 NWA / WLAN Radio loc. and other MSS USA Europe U-NII ISM and other Radio loc. ITS Amateur Radar and other Japan Radar 4.9 Gifford, Freescale
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Frequency Assignment of 18 - 40GHz Band in USA, Europe and Japan
September 2005 USA : GHz, GHz, GHz, GHz, GHz, GHz, GHz Bandwidth:5.1GHz Europe : GHz, GHz, GHz Bandwidth:6.5GHz Japan : GHz, GHz, GHz, GHz, GHz, GHz, GHz Bandwidth:5.05GHz GHz USA Europe Japan 27.5 28.35 29.1 29.25 31.0 31.3 38.6 40.0 17.7 19.7 26.5 24.5 37.0 39.5 22.0 22.4 22.6 23.0 27.0 25.250 38.0 38.5 39.0 18.72 19.22 Gifford, Freescale
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Frequency Assignment of 60GHz Band in USA, Europe and Japan
September 2005 Frequency Assignment of 60GHz Band in USA, Europe and Japan USA : GHz, 59-64GHz, 65-66GHz Europe : GHz, 64-65GHz Japan : GHz GHz 54 56 58 60 62 64 66 USA Europe Unlicensed Japan Gifford, Freescale
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