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Enhanced Data rates for Global Evolution (EDGE) and General Packet Radio Service (GPRS)INDEXEDGE-Enhanced Data rates for Global EvolutionEDGE - Enhanced Data rates for Global EvolutionOne of the great strengths of Ericssonīs EDGE (Enhanced Data rates for Global Evolution) solution is that it leverages the fusion of all the best aspects of the two leading standards: TDMA and GSM. For the first time, it will converge TDMA and GSM standards to evolve a common third generation network. A network that ultimately will provide seamless roaming for voice and data between TDMA and GSM via the same terminal. EDGE technology is designed to integrate into your existing network. So while developing your infrastructure to support the bandwidth required to offer 3G services, your existing investment is protected. And you donīt have to spend enormous amounts of money building a completely new infrastructure. 3G offers a massive market opportunity for existing TDMA and GSM network operators. The mobile data market is booming. In a few years it is estimated it will reach one billion subscribers. By the end of 2004, almost half of all Internet subscribers will access the Internet using mobile devices. EDGE will help make that happen. It will allow TDMA and GSM network operators to use existing TDMA and GSM radio bands to offer wireless multimedia IP-based services (the Mobile Internet) at speeds up to 384kbit/s - or even higher. The applications and services they are, and will be, using will bring about massive changes in the way we work and play. These services will be highly personalized and location-dependent. For example, the way we shop will be revolutionized. Imagine booking cinema and theatre tickets through your mobile phone. Or accessing your bank. Or simply paying for a purchase from a vending machine by pressing a few buttons on your mobile phone. It should be understood that the Mobile Internet is not just an easy way to describe the Internet over wireless network infrastructures. It is far more than that. These services will concentrate on delivering against the unique time-focused and situational criteria integral to the Mobile Internet Services will be highly personalised and include location services, financial trading, banking, e-commerce, as well as internet and intranet access. EDGE has been at the forefront of the move to the Mobile Internet, developing innovative 2G solutions that can deliver the beginning of the Mobile Internet now, and 3G solutions that will deliver a broader offering tomorrow.
EDGE greatly increases the capacity that can be carried over existing networks, giving more spectrum efficiency. Which means that EDGE allows better delivery of existing services, allowing to satisfy customerīs current voice only demands. And the introduction of Mobile Internet applications currently being developed will encourage more and more people to venture beyond voice only communications. Both in business and in private life, users will embrace activities such as mobile Internet access anywhere, e-mail, on-line shopping and hosts of other new applications and services. With EDGE you can build customer loyalty and prevent customer churn. In fact, by providing seamless services, you can look forward to long and sustained revenue growth from customers who will appreciate the power of mobility that EDGE gives them. The General Packet Radio Service (GPRS) is a new nonvoice value added service that allows information to be sent and received across a mobile telephone network. It supplements today's Circuit Switched Data and Short Message Service. GPRS is NOT related to GPS (the Global Positioning System), a similar acronym that is often used in mobile contexts. GPRS has several unique features which can be summarized as:
SPEED
Theoretical maximum speeds of up to 171.2 kilobits per second (kbps) are achievable with GPRS using all eight timeslots at the same time. This is about three times as fast as the data transmission speeds possible over today's fixed telecommunications networks and ten times as fast as current Circuit Switched Data services on GSM networks.
IMMEDIACY
GPRS facilitates instant connections whereby information can be sent or received immediately as the need arises. No dial-up modem connection is necessary. This is why GPRS users are sometimes referred to be as being "always connected". Immediacy is one of the advantages of GPRS (and SMS) when compared to Circuit Switched Data. High immediacy is a very important feature for time critical applications such as remote credit card authorization where it would be unacceptable to keep the customer waiting for even thirty extra seconds.
NEW APPLICATIONS, BETTER APPLICATIONS
GPRS facilitates several new applications that have not previously been available over GSM networks due to the limitations in speed of Circuit Switched Data (9.6 kbps) and message length of the Short Message Service (160 characters). These applications, range from web browsing to file transfer to home automation- the ability to remotely access and control in-house appliances and machines.
SERVICE ACCESS
To use GPRS, users specifically need:
Ļ a mobile phone or terminal that supports GPRS (existing GSM phones do NOT support GPRS)
Ļ a subscription to a mobile telephone network that supports GPRS
Ļ use of GPRS must be enabled for that user. Automatic access to the GPRS may be allowed by some mobile network operators, others will require a specific opt-in
Ļ knowledge of how to send and/ or receive GPRS information using their specific model of mobile phone, including software and hardware configuration (this creates a customer service requirement)
Ļ a destination to send or receive information through GPRS. Whereas with SMS this was often another mobile phone, in the case of GPRS, it is likely to be an Internet address, since GPRS is designed to make the Internet fully available to mobile users for the first time. From day one, GPRS users can access any web page or other Internet applications- providing an immediate critical mass of uses.
Having looked at the key user features of GPRS, lets look at the key features from a network operator perspective.
Key Network Features of GPRS
PACKET SWITCHING
GPRS involves overlaying a packet based air interface on the existing circuit switched GSM network. This gives the user an option to use a packet-based data service. To supplement a circuit switched network architecture with packet switching is quite a major upgrade. However, as we shall see later, the GPRS standard is delivered in a very elegant manner- with network operators needing only to add a couple of new infrastructure nodes and making a software upgrade to some existing network elements.
With GPRS, the information is split into separate but related "packets" before being transmitted and reassembled at the receiving end. Packet switching is similar to a jigsaw puzzle- the image that the puzzle represents is divided into pieces at the manufacturing factory and put into a plastic bag. During transportation of the now boxed jigsaw from the factory to the end user, the pieces get jumbled up. When the recipient empties the bag with all the pieces, they are reassembled to form the original image. All the pieces are all related and fit together, but the way they are transported and assembled varies. The Internet itself is another example of a packet data network, the most famous of many such network types.
SPECTRUM EFFICIENCY
Packet switching means that GPRS radio resources are used only when users are actually sending or receiving data. Rather than dedicating a radio channel to a mobile data user for a fixed period of time, the available radio resource can be concurrently shared between several users. This efficient use of scarce radio resources means that large numbers of GPRS users can potentially share the same bandwidth and be served from a single cell. The actual number of users supported depends on the application being used and how much data is being transferred. Because of the spectrum efficiency of GPRS, there is less need to build in idle capacity that is only used in peak hours. GPRS therefore lets network operators maximize the use of their network resources in a dynamic and flexible way, along with user access to resources and revenues.
GPRS should improve the peak time capacity of a GSM network since it simultaneously:
· allocates scarce radio resources more efficiently by supporting virtual connectivity
· migrates traffic that was previously sent using Circuit Switched Data to GPRS instead, and
· reduces SMS Center and signaling channel loading by migrating some traffic that previously was sent using SMS to GPRS instead using the GPRS/ SMS interconnect that is supported by the GPRS standards.
INTERNET AWARE
For the first time, GPRS fully enables Mobile Internet functionality by allowing interworking between the existing Internet and the new GPRS network. Any service that is used over the fixed Internet today- File Transfer Protocol (FTP), web browsing, chat, email, telnet- will be as available over the mobile network because of GPRS. In fact, many network operators are considering the opportunity to use GPRS to help become wireless Internet Service Providers in their own right.
The World Wide Web is becoming the primary communications interface- people access the Internet for entertainment and information collection, the intranet for accessing company information and connecting with colleagues and the extranet for accessing customers and suppliers. These are all derivatives of the World Wide Web aimed at connecting different communities of interest. There is a trend away from storing information locally in specific software packages on PCs to remotely on the Internet. When you want to check your schedule or contacts, instead of using something like "Act!", you go onto the Internet site such as a portal. Hence, web browsing is a very important application for GPRS.
Because it uses the same protocols, the GPRS network can be viewed as a sub-network of the Internet with GPRS capable mobile phones being viewed as mobile hosts. This means that each GPRS terminal can potentially have its own IP address and will be addressable as such.
SUPPORTS TDMA AND GSM
It should be noted right that the General Packet Radio Service is not only a service designed to be deployed on mobile networks that are based on the GSM digital mobile phone standard. The IS-136 Time Division Multiple Access (TDMA) standard, popular in North and South America, will also support GPRS. This follows an agreement to follow the same evolution path towards third generation mobile phone networks concluded in early 1999 by the industry associations that support these two network types.
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