Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
Wireless Infrastructure: Networks and Issues (2) H. Scott Matthews February 26, 2003
2
Recap of Last Lecture Wireless generally a ‘radio’ technology Dependent on antennas (cell sites) Cell sizes getting generally smaller Spectrum allocation has become an increasingly complex problem as there have been more demands for it (FCC) Number wired/wireless users ~ equal
3
FCC’s involvement In telecom, the government tends to regulate the devices not the network E.g. licenses spectrum for use Certifies devices (e.g. phones) compliant Industry/professional groups (e.g. IEEE) generally set equipment/network standards
4
Management Metrics Different type of problem since networks are generally private Subscribers Number, growth, net additions Voice quality Time to login to system, call access time Percent completed calls or call failure rate Coverage area Percent of US, Percent of population,.. Financial Margin (profit) per minute, subscriber Others?
5
Wireless ‘Data’ Networks IEEE 802.11b (used on campus) 11 Mbps, using 2.4 GHz spectrum (unlicensed!) 14 channels, 2.4 to 2.4835 GHz (80 MHz) Different channels legal around world, only chan. 1, 6, and 11 have no overlap Designing a big network means reusing channels and considering overlaps Usually uses PC cards, access points + wired Industry group (WiFi alliance) certifies products 802.11a: 54Mbps @ 5 Ghz, 12 channels no overlap - 500 MHz of frequency 802.11g backwards compatible with 802.11b, but boosts speed to 54 Mbps
6
CMU Campus Wi-Fi Network CMU campus: ubiquitous wired, wireless networks Every room on campus ‘wired’, every space ‘wireless’ 10,000 users; 350 wireless antennas (about 30 users each) How much electricity used? Functional, but not equivalent, comparison Show energy “to network 10,000 users wired/wireless” Only ‘network’ - not ‘attached devices’ - in boundary
7
Campus Network Model 120 Wiring Closets Office/room equipment 350 Wireless Antennas Main computer center
8
Two Data Sources Campus has building-level electricity meters installed Several buildings have more than one meter when areas have higher than average use Used for “Main computer center electricity” Not so useful for electricity of room/equipment Portable power meters to measure electricity use of pieces of equipment Measure one of each, scale up via inventory
9
Summary of Estimates Network electricity 6% of total campus - 1.7 kWh/ft 2 Wireless endpoints use 10x less electricity than wired Caveats: speeds, installation and maintenance requirements different Wireless speed bump coming (10x) but electricity use expected go up only 50% Relevance: more voice wireless than wired in the world
10
Overall Voice Network Elec Do similar analysis, estimate PSTN and wireless voice network electricity use PSTN = Public Switched Telephone Net Consider number and kW of cell sites Total energy use of sector, etc. Get estimate of 30 TWh/yr < 1% of US electricity consumption
11
Other Issues Ad hoc = latin for ‘for this (time)’ Ad hoc networks are temporary, maybe one use systems Difference in use and design of networks Don’t have to be ‘operating’ all the time ‘Beaming’ with palm pilots is an example New ‘Bluetooth’ devices will be too Useful for sensor networks (coming soon!) Issues with designing/managing ad hoc?
12
See publicinternetproject.org For details, more research
13
Open/Public Wireless Nets Example of more formalized/larger ad hoc networks (not fully “ad hoc”) Campus wireless is not an example because you need to be registered to use Communities building small-medium wireless networks with their own broadband connection and wireless points (hotspots) Could have ‘network name’ commonality but no password/authentication/registration There are people who drive around looking for ‘open’ wireless networks just for fun Note: these guys need more work / less free time
14
Implications of Open Nets Coordination (e.g. same network name) Security! Preventing questionable traffic Hacking/cracking/spamming Leeching (free rider problem)
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.