Stanford engineers argue that outmoded protocols and business rules, not technology, are why 95 percent of spectrum goes unused.
Imagine that you were only
allowed to fly on one airline, or take a single route to work, or use one
designated checkout counter at the grocery store. What would happen if that
airline or road or checkout counter became especially popular, or you wanted to
use them during a particularly busy time?
Efficient provisioning of resources requires that
consumers be able to switch to cheaper or less-crowded alternatives when the
need arises. A group of Stanford Engineers has applied this bit of obviousness
to the one area where, to date, it has been less than obvious: wireless
spectrum.
A 2005 study by the NSF found that only 5.2% of the
wireless spectrum from 30 MHz to 3000 MHz was in use at any one time. And yet a
study from the same year of the wireless spectrum devoted to cell phone signals
in New York City found that almost half of that spectrum was in use.
The problem is that we're all locked into the spectrum
offered by a single cell phone carrier, and our phones can't even access most
of the wifi hotspots that are in range, much less use them to make calls.
As Yap et al. outline in a provocative new paper entitled Delivering Capacity for the
Mobile Internet by Stitching Together Networks, this leads to all sorts of
inefficiencies that could be solved by a network ruled by standards that
allowed devices to be agnostic about which portion of the wireless spectrum
they are currently using:
- Increased capacity through more efficient
statistical sharing. Cellular
network operators tend to heavily over-provision their network in order to
handle times of peak load and congestion. Most of the time, the net- work is
lightly loaded. If instead they were able to hand off traffic to each other, or
from cellular to WiFi networks, then their traffic load would be smoother, and
their network more efficient. For example, what if AT&T could re-route
traffic from their iPhone users to T-Mobile during an overload? Or T-Mobile
could re- route their customers' flows to a nearby WiFi hotspot?
- Exploit differences in technologies and frequency
bands. Mobile
technologies such as EVDO and HSPA provide wide area coverage with consistent
bandwidth guaran- tees; while technologies like WiFi provide high band- width
and low latency. Lower frequencies provides better coverage and penetration;
while higher frequen- cies provides better spatial reuse. Being able to use the
most appropriate technology for the application at hand would make best use of
capacity available.
- Open up new sources of capacity. The ability to move between
networks also open up new sources of capacity. For example, one can now use a
network such as that of fon.com to supplement their main network, without
having to deploy an extensive WiFi network. Such crowd-sourcing can be a
powerful tool to cover dead spots and relieve congestion.
By "stitching together" all available wireless
networks, Yap et al. propose a future in which the unused 95% of available
wireless spectrum could be fully utilized - and thus exploding the amount
of wireless spectrum available to our ever growing array of ever more bandwidth-hungry devices, from cell phones and laptops to the impending tsunami of
wireless devices that will comprise the Internet of Things.
The key
to this evolution, say Yap et al., is a complete re-think of wireless protocols, an effort that is a subset of a larger effort called OpenFlow.
Currently in use by universities running experimental wireless networks,
OpenFlow allows handoffs across radios and networks. It might sound like a pipe
dream, but the OpenFlow consortium already claims to include a number of (still secret)
switch manufacturers.
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Comments
Then big business gets involved and....
mattgroom
07/26/2010
Posts:198
What exactly is "big" business? Most start-up owners and investors will tell you it's big to them.
Maybe it's time to bury the class-warfare neo-Marxist rhetoric.
dmshaw
07/26/2010
Posts:1
If you think Big business is the solution then you are sorely misinformed.
Like the internet, big business bought huge chunks of space of which little is used and the area is running out, hence new standards have had to be created to service big business' bad usage of bandwidth.
I reckon big business will try to buy every ounce of the bandwidth while hardly using it. And again in 20-50 years we will have the same problem.
mattgroom
07/30/2010
Posts:198
rsanchez1
07/26/2010
Posts:127
DonM
07/27/2010
Posts:1