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Poll: What

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Passive Distributed Antenna Systems ... Active Distributed Antenna Systems ... High and low power solutions available for medium-sized buildings to large macro networks. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Poll: What


1
Poll Whats prevented you from deploying
cellular in the Enterprise?
  • Cost/Budget
  • Carrier terms are not agreeable
  • Not knowing where to start / who to contact
  • Staff lacks cellular systems experience/knowledge
  • Too difficult to install or deploy OR
    architectural challenges

2
Distributed Antenna Systems (DAS) In The
Enterprise
  • John Spindler, Dir. of Product Management

3
DAS in the Enterprise
  • Whats the issue?
  • Wireless challenges in the enterprise
  • Whats the answer?
  • Things to consider
  • The Grail
  • Who pays?
  • DAS simplified
  • Questions answers

4
Poll Whats the main reason to invest in an
Enterprise cellular solution?
  • The need for ubiquitous cellular coverage
  • Increasing cellular data usage/capacity
  • Business-based wireless applications
  • BYOD (multi-mobile device using staff)
  • Amenities for visitors/customers
  • Safety security

5
Changes in Enterprise Communications
  • Ubiquity of mobile device use
  • Wireless displacement of land lines
  • Bring Your Own Device (BYOD)
  • Increasing dependence on wireless apps
  • Wireless app use in critical business functions
  • Increasing data/capacity demands
  • Users expect a high quality of service for both
    cellular and Wi-Fi

6
The Experts are Saying
  • The focus is shifting from deploying cellular
    network infrastructure in large public venues to
    the enterprise
  • According to ABI Research, in-building wireless
    market revenue will double to 9B by 2020
  • The market has become very focused on the
    enterprise Joe Madden, Mobile Experts
  • Fundamental DAS drivers remain unchanged and
    include coverage, capacity, spectrum efficiency,
    interference mitigation, data support,
    scalability, and adaptability Infonetics
    Research

7
There are gt290k Buildings 50k-200k ft2 in the USA
Commercial Buildings Energy Consumption Survey
2012, US Energy Information Agency
8
Cellular Wireless Challenges in the Enterprise
9
Its Still About Coverage in the Enterprise
  • Rapid carrier network evolution leaves gaps in
    coverage service indoor often not guaranteed
  • We havent overcome the insulation of the indoor
    from outdoor
  • Construction
  • Signal Dominance
  • Enterprises typically plan on 100-150 square feet
    per person
  • Average employee uses lt100 MB data/day

10
Green Initiatives are Good for Energy Efficiency
Not so Good for RF Efficiency
  • Construction type of building has a great
    impact on wireless system performance ease of
    installation
  • Energy efficient buildings shield cell tower
    signals.
  • 2.8B square feet of LEED-certified building space
  • 45 of new non-residential construction will be
    green this year

11
Whats The Answer?
  • it depends

12
Enterprise Wireless Requirements
  • Coverage everywhere
  • In most enterprises user density is low,
    therefore capacity is not the issue
  • Data usage is primarily achieved via WiFi, not
    cellular data networks
  • Support of one or more wireless operators, to
    accommodate not only employees/staff, but in some
    instances roaming visitors.
  • Support of one or more wireless frequencies (700,
    850, 1900, AWS)
  • Minimal disruption to operations during system
    installation.
  • A system which is easily upgraded to handle
    future coverage and capacity requirements.
  • Mitigation of interference issues between mobile
    devices and other equipment (healthcare,
    robotics, etc.)
  • Aesthetically unobtrusive (invisible)
  • No safety hazards to the staff

13
There are Many Coverage Capacity Tools
  • Repeater
  • Brings in RF from the outdoor macro cellular
    network
  • Low cost
  • Not dedicated capacity variable performance
    throughout area
  • Distributed Radios
  • Small radios called picocells and femtocells
    (based on power level)
  • Do not rely on the macro network for switching
    and hand-offs
  • Evolving technology often used for Hotspot
    solutions for 1 or few services
  • Passive Distributed Antenna Systems (DAS)
  • RF is distributed over coax cables to antennas
    throughout a building or area
  • Low performance solution as coax cable losses
    lower power signal quality over distance
    performance is not uniformly reliable
  • Requires an RF source to feed the system
  • Active Distributed Antenna Systems (DAS)
  • Fiber-optic based RF distribution system
  • System converts and amplifies signals throughout
    an area amplifiers close to the user for optimal
    network performance
  • High and low power solutions available for
    medium-sized buildings to large macro networks
  • Requires an RF source to feed the system

14
What are Distributed Antenna Systems and Where is
DAS Deployed?
  • Low power amplifiers connected by cabling
    distributed to deliver cellular (licensed-band)
    services
  • Connected to the cellular network
  • Centralized backhaul connection to service
    provider (central office)
  • 2G/3G/4G service agnostic
  • Distributed by fiber, coax or Ethernet throughout
    local area
  • To improve wireless coverage and capacity in
    areas where cell towers cant be installed or
    adequately provide service
  • Malls, hotels, casinos, arenas, stadiums,
    hospitals
  • Campuses public spaces
  • Urban or suburban areas
  • Tunnels, coastlines, canyons
  • High-rise, MDU, Enterprise

15
Enterprise DAS
16
DAS is a Cost-Effective Flexible Solution for
Wireless Coverage and Capacity
Thin Coax
  • Flexible and scalable solution to accommodate
    single or multiple operators and frequencies
  • Easy to design
  • Active DAS is similar to Wi-Fi, easy to install
  • Seamless interaction with the macro network
  • Pay as you go, minimize up front investment
  • Equipment may be centralized, keeping maintenance
    costs low
  • Simple RF management easy to add coverage
  • Longevity of investment through scalability
    capacity added when needed

Remote
Expansion
Fiber Cable
Main Hub
17
Things to Consider
18
Key Questions to Right-Size the Solution
  • Whats the issue coverage, capacity, or both?
  • How many wireless users do you have (employees
    and guests)?
  • Is wireless data supported via WiFi, cellular
    data, or both?
  • Today LTE is a data-only service
  • Does one wireless carrier dominate usage in the
    facility?
  • Is support for multiple operators necessary?

19
Facility and Installation Considerations
Potential Cost Impacts
  • Type of environment - Open layout, dense, mixed
    use
  • Buildings construction materials (sheetrock,
    metal, concrete, etc.)
  • RF design goals (required strength of signal)
  • What type of cable infrastructure is installed
    and/or will be required?
  • Is there dark fiber available?
  • Are there any special installation requirements?
  • Is conduit required?
  • 50 labor premium
  • How much conduit Required in just the
    horizontals or everywhere?
  • How large is the conduit how many fibers how
    long are the runs?
  • Building-code requirement or environmental need
    based on facility type
  • Are there any fire code requirements?
  • Working hours, access arrangements

20
Special Requirements
  • Hospitals
  • Tenting, union and/or incumbent installer,
    conduit, core drilling, work hour restrictions,
    validation of drawings (lead-lined walls), proper
    definition of coverage requirements (e.g.
    Operating Rooms, boiler rooms, etc.), RF
    management plan.
  • Campus
  • Union and/or incumbent installer, validation of
    facility drawings and fiber map, conduit, work
    hour restrictions, core drilling, high lift
  • Manufacturing
  • Union labor, conduit, work hour restriction, high
    lift
  • Airport
  • Union labor, security clearance, conduit, work
    hour restriction, high lift, RF management plan.
  • Hospitality
  • Work hour restrictions, historic architecture,
    union labor (regional)
  • Corporate Office
  • Union labor, conduit, work hour restriction

21
In Search of the Holy Grail
  • The Bridgekeepers Three Questions

22
Is DC to Daylight Necessary in the Enterprise?
ATT Verizon Sprint T-Mobile
700MHz Data Data - Data
850MHz Voice Voice - -
1900MHz Data Voice Voice/Data Voice
AWS Data Data - Data
A solution which supports 700MHz, 850Mhz, 1900MHz
and AWS frequencies can deliver 2G/3G/4G coverage
and capacity for all 4 major U.S. wireless
operators
23
What About Using Existing WLAN for DAS?
  • Not recommended because
  • Different technologies different antenna
    footprint
  • Wi-Fi has 6-8x more access points than a typical
    active DAS
  • Unknown performance of installed copper plant
  • The cost of the additional cable is negligible
  • Theres no cost-efficient and simple solution
    available today

24
Should Cellular Public Safety Be On The Same
System?
  • Reasons to Combine
  • Reasons to Differentiate
  • Very similar RF penetration challenges
  • Always on service expectation cellular nearing
    mission critical
  • Reduce cost by using common infrastructure and
    materials
  • Ownership maintenance responsibility may be
    different
  • RF stability differences
  • Single point of failure
  • Some jurisdictions mandate separation of systems
    (150)
  • Traffic prioritization (gt40k calls daily)
  • RF design plan may be unique
  • Different location priorities (stairwells versus
    board rooms)
  • Different capacity loads demand different amounts
    of amplifiers

25
Who Pays?
26
Common Business Models
27
Enterprise Funding Challenges
  • Financing in a BYOD? Multiple devices per user
    for which WiFi and mobile services expected
  • Carrier portability doesnt support carrier-paid
    investments in buildings
  • Carrier ROI models are getting tougher
  • Neutral Hosts cant make the numbers work in
    enterprises

At the end of the day, in most cases, it will be
the responsibility of the enterprise to select
and fund a solution
28
DAS Simplified
29
Enterprise DAS Can Be Easy!
  1. Identify your real needs based on user population
    density(dont ask for what you dont need in the
    future)
  2. Understand what support you need from the
    carriers involve them right away OR find a
    business partner who will do that for you
  3. Understand what your barriers may be with your
    building construction, space and access during
    installation

30
Choose a Solution that Meets Your Project
Requirements
TE DAS FlexWave Prism Spectrum
TE DAS Fusion
Enterprise WiFi and/or uLTE
Large Enterprise
gt500k sqft
Enterprise WiFi
Med. Enterprise
50k 500k sqft
TE DAS Fusion
Small Cell TE DAS Unison
Small CellTE DAS Unison
Residential WiFi
Small Enterprise
lt50k sqft
Small Cell
Small Cell
WiFi uLTE
1-4 bands
Neutral Host
31
Questions?
32
Thank you!
  • John.Spindler_at_TE.com
  • 408.464.8111
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