Techno-economical aspects of LTE mobile broadband at 800 MHz and 2.6 GHz
Terminal and Application Aspects of the Evolution of Broadband Mobile Services
description
Transcript of Terminal and Application Aspects of the Evolution of Broadband Mobile Services
Heidelberg, 25 February 1999
MTM’99 Workshop
Terminal and Application Aspects of the Evolution of Broadband Mobile
Services
EURESCOM P809Mobility in the Broadband Environment based on IN Evolution
Giuseppe Plagenza
Tel: +39 011 2286476Fax: +39 011 2286190
E-mail: [email protected]
Heidelberg, 25 February 1999
MTM’99 Workshop
Goals
To investigate terminal development in relation to the introduction of broadband mobile multimedia services
To review the communications and application technologies associated with these “new” terminals
Heidelberg, 25 February 1999
MTM’99 Workshop
Terminal Requirements
1. The set of general-purpose requirements for UMTS terminals needs extending
2. The resulting set of requirements can be splitted into three classes of features:
- Features related to the use of IC cards
- Features related to applications- Features related to mobility
Heidelberg, 25 February 1999
MTM’99 Workshop
Use of IC cards
Physical and functional interface between the terminal and the IC card
Mechanisms to download information into the terminal Security for downloadable data and applications Standardized execution environment for downloadable services (e.g. MExE, SIM Application Toolkit)
Heidelberg, 25 February 1999
MTM’99 Workshop
Applications
Identification of the terminal capabilities Support of the VHE while roaming External standardized functional interface (e.g. API) Availability of specific applications Capability to interface with specific devices Mechanisms to encode/decode video/audio streams Synchronization of media streams Standardized API to interact with the terminal (e.g.
SIM Application Toolkit)
Heidelberg, 25 February 1999
MTM’99 Workshop
Mobility Requirements
Registration/deregistration to SP and NO Location update Connection oriented or connectionless services Unalterable equipment identification Emergency calls even without a USIM Authentication and encryption mechanisms Handover Different access modes (e.g. DECT, GSM-900, GSM-
1800, GPRS-900, GPRS-1800, UMTS FDD CDMA, UMTS TDD CDMA)
Heidelberg, 25 February 1999
MTM’99 Workshop
Security Aspects
Goals
ConfidentialityIntegrity
AvailabilityLegitimacy
Accountabilities
Solutions
AuthenticationAccess priorities
CipheringDifferent policies
Recovery from viruses
Heidelberg, 25 February 1999
MTM’99 Workshop
Client-Server Framework
TerminalEquipment
CoreNetworks
ApplicationDomain
ApplicationClient
ApplicationServer
Standardized APIStandardized
API
AccessNetworks
ApplicationServer
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MTM’99 Workshop
HTMLBrowser
WAP Server
INTERNET
INTRANET
WMLBrowser
Web Server
DBMS
WAP Services
Heidelberg, 25 February 1999
MTM’99 Workshop
SIM Application Toolkit
It permits to exploit the computational power and the memory of SIM cards
SIM cards can start actions that will be executed by the terminal (sending of SMs, call control,
menu management, access to local information, etc.) Download over the air of data and applications (e.g.
via SMS) Example of client-server application based on the
SIM Application Toolkit:SMSSMS
Server ApplicationSMSC GatewayClient Application
TCP/IPTCP/IPTCP/IPTCP/IP
Heidelberg, 25 February 1999
MTM’99 Workshop
Add-on VideoConference
Participant A
Co-ordinator
Participant B
Participant CNETWORK
Heidelberg, 25 February 1999
MTM’99 Workshop
Evolution Scenario
1998SMS+CSD
1999HSCSDSMS-CB
2000GPRS
2001 2002UMTS/EDGE
SIM Application Toolkit
MEXE (WAP, Java), Wireless Knowledge
Smart Messaging (SMS)
Fax
Information Systems via
SMS
Videophony Real time
applicationsHealthcare
BankingLocation Services
Traffic InfoFleet Man.
TicketsContent
Push
Internet
Intranet
Wireless Imaging
Mobile Commerce
Monitoring
On-line Email
Remote Control
Wireless Multimedia