1 / 97

Guide to Wireless Communications

Guide to Wireless Communications Objectives Explain how the major wireless technologies are used today - WiFi Describe the applications used in wireless technology List and explain the advantages of wireless technology List and explain the disadvantages of wireless technology

Ava
Télécharger la présentation

Guide to Wireless Communications

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Guide to Wireless Communications

  2. Objectives • Explain how the major wireless technologies are used today - WiFi • Describe the applications used in wireless technology • List and explain the advantages of wireless technology • List and explain the disadvantages of wireless technology

  3. Wireless – the hype? • Wireless communications is the next major event in the history of technology • Wireless communications will revolutionize how we live • Users will be able to access digital resources no matter where they find themselves

  4. How Wireless Technology Is Used • Wireless refers to any device that does not use wires • Wireless communications refers to the transmission of user data without wires

  5. Wireless Applications • Wireless applications are found anywhere employees need mobility, including in the following industries: • Education • Military • Business • Entertainment • Travel • Construction • Warehouse management • Health care

  6. Wireless Communications in Industries • Education—classrooms, presentations, libraries, access anywhere on campus • Military—Universal Handset, a 1.5 lb. device allows full motion video, cellular and satellite communications, and Internet access • Business—office space where traditional infrastructure does not exist, such as conference room or hotel room

  7. Wireless Communications in Industries • Entertainment—barcodes on tickets validated by handheld readers; fans accessing game statistics, watching replays, ordering concessions through notebook computers or PDAs • Travel—global positioning systems (GPS) providing emergency roadside assistance; airline passengers using wireless notebooks or PDAs

  8. Wireless Communications in Industries • Construction—scheduling construction phases and employee travel, completing payroll, diagnosing equipment • Warehouse Management—inventory, shipping, reading bar-coded pallet labels • Health Care—tracking dispensed medicine, verifying patients’ bar-coded armbands, accessing patient records

  9. Current Wireless Systems • Fixed Wireless Access (last mile) • Wide Area Wireless Data Services (WWANs) • Cellular Systems • Satellite Systems & Paging Systems • HomeRF (SWAP) (now dead?) • Bluetooth • Wireless LANs (WiFi) • WiFi5

  10. SWAP • Shared Wireless Access Protocol (SWAP) defines wireless computer networks • Allows wireless data and voice communication from distances up to 150 feet at speeds up to 10 million bits per second (megabits or Mbps) • Established by HomeRF Working Group, comprised of over 50 different companies • Uses wireless home networking adapter that sends data over radio waves throughout the home, as seen in Figure 1-1

  11. Home Wireless Network

  12. HomeRF • Shared Wireless Access Protocol (SWAP), Home RF is an open industry specification that allows wireless devices to share information around home • Operates in license-free 2.4 GHz frequency and uses frequency-hopping spread spectrum (FHSS) • Provides quality-of-service (QoS) that prioritizes time-sensitive transmissions • Version 1.0, introduced in 2000, transmits at 1.6 Mbps, but version 2.0, released in 2001, transmits at 10 Mbps

  13. Bluetooth • Uses devices with small radio transceivers, called radio modules, built onto microprocessor chips • Special software, called a link manager, identifies other Bluetooth devices, creates links with them, and sends and receives data • Transmits at up to 1 Mbps over a distance of 33 feet and is not impeded by physical barriers • Bluetooth products created by over 1500 computer, telephone, and peripheral vendors

  14. Bluetooth Headset • The Bluetooth headset automatically establishes a connection with the telephone

  15. Piconet • Two or more Bluetooth devices that send and receive data make up a personal area network (PAN), also called a piconet • Figure 1-3 shows a Bluetooth network Bluetooth was named after the 10th century Danish King Harold Bluetooth, who was responsible for unifying Scandinavia

  16. Bluetooth Network

  17. Network Topology • Two types of Bluetooth network topologies • Piconet • Scatternet (collection of piconets) • Two Bluetooth devices within range automatically connect • One device is the master, controlling all wireless traffic • The other is the slave, taking commands from the master.

  18. Piconets • A piconet is one master and at least one slave using the same channel • An active slave is sending transmissions • A passive slave is not actually participating

  19. Bluetooth Issues • Many challenges face Bluetooth • Cost • Limited support • Shortcomings in protocol itself • Positioning in marketplace • Conflicts with other devices in radio spectrum

  20. Cost • Chips have decreased in price to about $15 from a high of over $75 • Not advantageous to replace a $7 cable with a $15 chip • Many think cost must come down to about $5 before Bluetooth reaches competitive advantage

  21. Limited Support • Bluetooth is caught in “chicken or egg” scenario • Because of low market penetration, Bluetooth is not fully supported by hardware and software vendors • Users reluctant to purchase technology that is not fully supported • Microsoft is “straddling the fence” • Provides Bluetooth support for Pocket PC 2002 • Does not support Bluetooth in Windows XP

  22. Protocol Limitations • Major limitation is no hand-off between piconets • Unlike cell phone switching, Bluetooth connection is broken and must be restored with new master when device moves from one piconet area to another • Bluetooth provides less than optimal security by authenticating devices instead of users • Devices cannot determine how function of other devices can be used in cooperating setting

  23. Market Position • Current position is between IEEE 802.11x WLANs and cell phones • WLAN is preferred technology for connecting wireless devices to form network • WLAN is mature, robust, flexible, popular technology • Trend today is fewer devices instead of more, and cell phones have integrated capabilities that Bluetooth lacks

  24. Spectrum Conflict • The 2.4 GHz band that Bluetooth uses conflicts with IEEE 802.11b WLANs • WLAN may drop connection when detects another device sharing its frequency • Most obvious fix is moving Bluetooth device away from WLAN • Many vendors offer products that let Bluetooth and 802.11b WLANs share spectrum • New 802.11a WLAN standard uses a different frequency, eliminating the conflict

  25. Wireless Local Area Network (WLAN) • Based on the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers (IEEE) 802.11b networking standard • WLAN computers transmit up to 11 Mbps at distances of 375 feet • IEEE 802.11a standard increases bandwidth to 54 Mbps • Figure 1-8 shows a WLAN warehouse network • 802.11 often called wireless ethernet

  26. WLAN Warehouse Network

  27. WLAN Applications • Almost nonexistent until 2000, WLANs have experienced astonishing growth, with sales expected to top $34 billion by 2004 • WLANs have broad range of uses including colleges and schools, businesses, airports, warehouses, shopping malls, and stadiums • WLANs have taken the world by storm and the list of users grows daily

  28. How WLANs Operate • Although a variety of radio frequency WLANs exist, different products share similarities and operate similarly • Only two components are required for a wireless network • Wireless network interface (NIC) cards • Access points (AP)

  29. Wireless NIC and Access Point (AP) • Each computer on WLAN uses wireless network interface card (NIC) with built-in antenna • Wireless NIC sends signals through radio waves to a fixed access point (AP) • AP point may be attached to a wired LAN • Figure 1-9 shows an AP and wireless NIC • WLANs also used in office environments, as shown in Figure 1-10

  30. Access Point and Wireless NIC

  31. Office WLAN

  32. Wireless Network Interface Card • NIC connects computer to network so it can send and receive data • On wired network, NIC has a port for a cable connector, as seen in Figure 6-1 • On wireless network, the NIC has an antenna to send and receive RF signals • NIC changes internal data from parallel to serial, divides data into packets with sending and receiving addresses, determines when to send packet, and transmits packet

  33. Integrated Wireless NICs • Some vendors plan integrating components of wireless NIC onto single chip on motherboard • Some notebook manufacturers will integrate wireless NIC into top of notebook behind LCD display • This will keep RF waves away from motherboard

  34. Software for Wireless NICs • Software may be part of operating system itself • Windows XP has software integrated while previous versions of Windows do not • Software may be separate program loaded into the computer • All operating systems before Windows XP, including Linux, require loading software • Operating systems for PDAs may soon integrate software to recognize a wireless NIC

  35. Access Point • An access point (AP) has three main parts • An antenna and a radio transmitter/receiver • An RJ-45 wired network interface to connect to a wired network • Special bridging software

  36. Access Point

  37. Functions of an Access Point • Access point has two basic functions • Acts as base station for wireless network • Acts as bridge between wireless and wired network • Bridges are LAN connectors at MAC level • See Figure 6-7

  38. Access Point as a Bridge

  39. Characteristics of an Access Point • Range approximately 375 feet (115 meters) • Generally supports over 100 users • One access point for each 50 users with light email and basic Internet access • One access point per 20 users for heavy network access and large file transfer • APs typically mounted on ceiling, but AC power may be a problem • Power over Ethernet feature delivers DC power through standard unshielded twisted pair (UTP) Ethernet cable

  40. Ad Hoc Mode • Ad Hoc Mode or peer-to-peer mode lets wireless clients communicate among themselves without an access point • Officially called Independent Basic Services Set (IBSS), this mode is easy to set up, but it does not have access to a wired network • See Figure 6-8

  41. Ad Hoc Mode

  42. Infrastructure Mode • Infrastructure Mode, also called Basic Service Set (BSS), has wireless clients and an access point • More access points can be added to create an Extended Service Set (ESS) • See Figure 6-9

  43. Extended Service Set (ESS)

  44. Features of Access Points • Coverage area should overlap when using multiple access points • Wireless clients survey radio frequencies to find an AP that provides better service • A seamless handoff occurs when client associates with new AP

  45. ESS and Subdivided Networks • Drawback of ESS WLANs is that all wireless clients and APs must be part of same network to allow roaming • Network managers like to subdivide networks into subnets, but this prevents clients from roaming freely • Alternative may be software that tricks network into seeing subnets as one network

  46. Wireless Gateway • Devices that follow 802.11 standard are becoming less expensive and more popular • Wireless Gateway has made future of HomeRF very shaky • Wireless gateway has wireless access point, Network Address Translator (NAT) router, firewall, connections for DSL and cable modems, and other features

  47. IEEE 802.11 • Introduced in 1990 • Defines cable-free local area network with either fixed or mobile locations that transmit at either 1 or 2 Mbps • Uses OSI model with functions of PHY and MAC layer performing WLAN features • See Figure 6-10 • Slow bandwidth insufficient for most network applications

  48. WLAN features in PHY and MAC layers

  49. IEEE 802.11b • 1999 amendment to 802.11 standard • Added two higher speeds: 5.5 and 11 Mbps • Called Wi-Fi • Quickly became standard for WLANs

More Related