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Title: Dr IZHAR-UL-HAQ


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wireless local loop
  • By
  • Dr.Izhar-ul-Hq
  • ICT, ISLAMABAD

3
What is WLL
  • WLL stands for Wireless Local Loop
  • and it is basically the use of radio to provide
  • a telephone connection to the home.
  • It is sometimes called radio in the loop (RITL)
    or fixed-radio access (FRA).
  • When WLL connects subscribers to the public
    switched telephone network (PSTN), radio signals
    are used as a substitute for copper for all or
    part of the connection between the subscriber and
    the switch. Included in this is cordless access
    systems, proprietary fixed radio access, and
    fixed cellular systems.

4
Basic WLL communication system
5
Copper versus Wireless The Cost of the Last Mile
6
Overview
  • Throughout the world of telecommunications
    professionals there has been a dramatic rise in
    interest in the WLL technology. In the late 20th
    century, industry analysts predicted that the
    global WLL market would reach millions of
    subscribers by the year 2000. An article in Red
    Herring magazine in 1997 predicted that, the
    WLL market is expected to grow from 563 million
    in 1996 to at least 6.3 billion in 2002. Much
    of this growth is occurring in emerging economies
    where half the world's population lacks plain old
    telephone service (POTS). Developing nations like
    China, India, Brazil, Russia, and Indonesia are
    looking to WLL technology as an efficient way to
    deploy POTS for millions of subscriberswithout
    the expense of burying tons of copper wire. Later
    on in this document the economics of WLL will
    further be delved into.

7
  • One of the best economic contributions WLL makes
    in developed economies is that it helps to unlock
    competition in the local loop, this enables new
    operators to bypass existing wireline networks to
    deliver POTS and data access. It will be shown
    throughout that the question isn't will the
    local loop go wireless?, but, when and where?.
    The aim of this Lecture is to discuss the history
    and basics of WLL, and look at the impact in
    Pakistan and the world. It will also examine the
    markets both past and present, and attempt to
    judge the future for this technology.

8
History of WLL
  • Wireless access first started to become a
    possibility in the 1950s and 1960s as simple
    radio technology reduced in price. For some
    remote communities in isolated parts of the
    country, the most effective manner of providing
    communication was to provide a radio, kept in a
    central part of the community. By the end of the
    1970s, communities linked by radio often had
    dedicated radio links to each house, the links
    connected into the switch such that they were
    used in the same manner as normal twisted-pair
    links. The widespread deployment of the cellular
    base station into switching sites helped with
    cost reduction. Similar access using
    point-to-point microwave links still continues to
    be widely used today.

9
  • During the reunification of West and East
    Germany, much funding was put into increasing the
    teledensity in East Germany. The installation of
    twisted-pair access throughout would have been a
    slow process. In the interim, cellular radio was
    seen to offer a stop-gap measure to provide rapid
    telecommunications capability. So in East Germany
    a number of cellular networks, based upon the
    analog Nordic Mobile Telephone (NMT) standard,
    were deployed in the 800 MHz frequency range. The
    key difference was that subscribers had fixed
    unit mounted to the sides of their houses to
    increase the signal strength and hence allow the
    networks to be constructed with larger cells for
    lower costs.
  • Thus, we see the first WLL network was born.

10
Historical Path
  • Early 1950s.
  • Single-channel VHF subscriber equipment was
    purchased from Motorola, but the maintenance
    costs were too high as a result of the valve
    technology used and the power consumption too
    high. The trial was discontinued and the
    subscribers were connected by wire

11
Mid-1950s.
  • Raytheon was given seed funds to develop 6 GHz
    band equipment, which would have a better
    reliability and a lower power consumption. The
    designers failed to achieve those goals and the
    system still proved too expensive

12
Late 1950s.
  • Some equipment capable of providing mobile
    service to rural communities was put on trial.
    Users were prepared to pay a premium for mobile
    use, but the system still proved to be too
    expensive in a fixed application for which users
    were not prepared to pay a premium.

13
Early 1960s
  • Systems able to operate on a number of radio
    channels were developed, eliminating the need for
    each user to share a specific channel and thus
    increase capacity. The general lack of channels
    and high cost, however, made these systems
    unattractive.

14
Early 1970s.
  • A Canadian manufacturer developed equipment
    operating at 150 MHz that proved successful in
    serving fixed subscribers on the Island of Lake
    Superior. The lack of frequencies in the band,
    however, precluded its widespread use.

15
1970s Late.
  • The radio equipment from several US
    manufacturers was linked to provide service to
    isolated Puerto Rican villages. The service was
    possible only because the geographical location
    allowed the use of additional channels, providing
    greater capacity than would have been possible
    elsewhere.

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Early 1980s.
  • Communication satellites were examined for rural
    applications but were rejected as being too
    expensive.
  • 1985. Trials of a point-to-multipoint radio
    system using digital modulation promised
    sufficient capacity and reliability to make WLL
    look promising.

17
Four different flavours of WLL systems
  • Cellular-based systems consisting of a
    network of base stations. The older systems are
    usually based on analogue technology, which is
    well proven and low-cost, but provides reduced
    speech quality, limited data capacity and low
    security. Examples include NMT 450/900, AMPS,
    TACS, N-AMPS. The newer digital systems offer
    better spectrum usage and are cost-effective for
    voice but are less standardised and still provide
    only limited fax/data throughput. Examples
    include GSM, DCS1800/PCS1900, IS-136/D-AMPS,
  • IS-95 800/1900.

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  • Cordless-based systems. These provide efficient
    spectrum usage in high densities but with limited
    range, making high infrastructure costs for
    smaller cell sizes.
  • Examples include
  • DECT, CT-2, PHS.

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  • Proprietary systems. These are usually
    custom-designed for the application and provide
    high quality voice and data services, and other
    enhanced services. While many of these systems
    provide superior service to the cordless and
    digital cellular standards, they must overcome
    the inertia created by the high installed base of
    the older technologies. These include FDMA, TDMA,
    CDMA systems, such as the products made by
    Qualcomm and Granger.

20
  • Satellite-based systems, as described above,
    are also proprietary and are mainly focussed on
    the mobile market, but fixed line access is also
    envisaged in a few years. These provide global
    coverage in virtually all environments, but
    currently have very high usage costs and there
    are still unresolved domestic control issues.
    Examples include Iridium and Globalstar.

21
WLL encoding
  • Safety
  •         Security
  •         Minimum of errors
  •         Most efficient data transfer

22
Speech encoding
  • In digital radio systems it is necessary to
    turn voice signals, which analog into a digital
    data stream. Speech encoding is a highly complex
    topic and a full treatment is well beyond the
    bounds of this talk. The simplest speech encoders
    are essentially analog-to-digital converters. The
    analog speech waveform is sampled periodically,
    and the instantaneous voltage level associated
    with the speech is converted into a digital
    level. The two main parameters are how
    frequently the speech is sampled "sample rate"
    and how many different bits are used to describe
    the voltage level.

23
Error-correction coding and interleaving
  • Information transmitted via a radio channel
    is liable to be corrupted. Interference, fading
    and random noise cause errors to be received, the
    level of which depends on the severity of the
    interference. Error correction is widely deployed
    in mobile radio, where fast fading is almost
    universally present. It is less critical in WLL,
    where the LOS path results in less severe
    problems. Nevertheless it is still necessary,
    especially for computer data transfer.
    Error-correction systems work by adding
    redundancy to the transmitted signal. The
    receiver checks that the redundant data is as
    expected if it is not, the receiver can make
    error correction decisions. Error-correction
    methodologies fall into two categories, block
    coding or convolutional coding. Both are highly
    involved and mathematical and are beyond the
    scope of this talk.

24
Ciphering
  • Almost all modern radio systems rely on some
    form of ciphering to provide secure transmission.
    The use of such security techniques both
    reassures the user that the conversation cannot
    be overheard and allows the operator to
    authenticate the user. Most ciphering schemes are
    relatively straightforward. The base station and
    the subscriber unit agree on a "mask" on a
    call-by-call basis. To the covert listener, who
    does not know the mask, the data is
    incomprehensible.

25
Multiple access
  • WLL technologies have differed over the years
    in the multiple access technologies that they
    use. A decision about which technology to adopt
    will depend upon the application. Each operator
    has a given amount of radio spectrum to divide
    among its users. There are broadly three main
    ways to do this

26
  • Frequency Division Multiple Access (FDMA),
  • in which the frequency is divided into a
    number of slots and each user access a particular
    slot for a length of a call
  • Time Division Multiple Access (TDMA),
  • in which each user access all the frequency
    but for only a short period of time
  • Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA),
  • in which each user access all the frequency
    for all the time but distinguishes the
    transmission through the use of a particular code
  •  

27
CDMA One of Multi-Access Technology
Time
CDMA
Code
User 3
User 2
TDMA
All users obtain service channel at the same time
and within the same frequency band
User 1
Time
Frequency
User 3
User 2
FDMA
User 1
Time
Service channels are allocated to different users
at different times, for example GSM
User 1
User 2
User 3
Frequency
Service Channels are allocated to different users
at different bands, for example TACS system
Frequency
28
Overview What is CDMA?
  • CDMA stands for "Code Division Multiple Access
  • CDMA is a 3G-based technologies and can works in
    multi frequency band(450MHz, 800MHz, 1900MHz,
    2.1G) .CDMA includes a family of standards
    developed by 3GPP2 CDMA2000 1X, CDMA2000 1xEV-DO
    and CDMA2000 1xEV-DV.
  • It is a popular technology and growing rapidly in
    both mobile and WLL environment Currently, Over
    212 Millions subscribers adopt CDMA technologies.

29
What is CDMA450?
-----Multiple Working Frequency Band
  • CDMA450 is a CDMA2000 system deployed in 450 MHz
  • CDMA450 is the best choice for WLL with best
    coverage performance
  • Massive CDMA450 Successful cases both in
    developing and developed country

F-Band Up link Down link
1 450MHz 450 457.5 460 467.5
2 800MHz 824 849 869 894
3 1900MHz 1850 1910 1930 1990
4 2100MHz 1920 1980 2110 2170
30
CDMA System architecture introduce
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WLL Wireless Local Loop
  • Wireless is now accepted as an alternative local
    loop technology and its use has increased
    dramatically by incumbents and new entrants
    throughout the world.
  • WLL involves the final connection between the
    existing telecom infrastructure and a
    subscriber's home by wireless technologies rather
    than cable
  • CDMA WLL technology, which is wireless based, is
    ideally suited for urban regions of Pakistan as
    well as congested rural areas where it is
    extremely difficult to lay the cables
  • CDMA WLL an affordable alternative for wire line
    voice and internet access services

32
Wireless Local Loop is booming
  • In low telecom penetration countries, there is
    tremendous demand for new business and
    residential telephone service. More and more
    operators are looking to wireless technologies to
    rapidly provide thousands of new subscribers with
    high-quality telephone service at a reasonable
    price.
  • Existing landline operators can extend their
    network with WLL
  • Cellular operators can capitalize on their
    current network to deliver residential service
    with WLL
  • New service providers can quickly deploy
    non-traditional WLL solutions to rapidly meet a
    community's telephony needs
  • The unique features and benefits of CDMA make it
    an excellent technology choice for fixed
    wireless telephone systems.

33
What Problems PTCL Meet for Seamless Coverage
Last mile access - Trouble in fixed network
C.O
  • High investment
  • Transmit cable expense
  • Land rent
  • Long deployment delays
  • Cant meet increasing market
  • No mobility

C.O
C.O
C.O
34
Service provision Difficulty in rural areas
Convenient Telecom will stimulate Economy Fact
Low telecom penetration in Rural Area!
  • Fixed Line
  • High investment, Hard for maintenance
  • Higher Density area is far away from C.O. or ONU
  • Tough terrain Mountains, Rivers, Lakes,
    Deserts, Gobi and Grassland, etc.
  • Lack of infrastructure transmission...
  • Low productiveness
  • Low population density with broad area
  • Less traffic per user
  • Maintenance cost might be higher than revenue
  • Satellite Transmission
  • High cost, unbearable for public

Subscribers Penetration
Fixed line 234,000 9.24
Rural 13,000 0.5
Mobile 279,000 10.54
Internet 33,000 1.3
(example Tibet rural service situation)
35
WLL is The Best Solution
  • Low investment
  • Transmission in the air, no cable cost
  • few infrastructure expense
  • Quick deployment
  • attract more sub., especially high-end sub.
  • Flexible network, easy adjustment
  • Meet the need of increasing market
  • Wide coverage, attract new sub.
  • Remote area
  • Provide limited mobility

36
CDMA450 WLL, an Excellent but Affordable Offering
  • 450MHz has the best radio propagation for broader
    coverage Lower frequencies are the key to
    reducing cost
  • Especially suitable for broad, low-density
    coverage, due to long-range propagation ( up to
    30 km )
  • Excellent ability to provide urban coverage due
    to good line of sight propagation
    characteristics
  • CDMA450 system is a cost-effective 3G solution
  • CDMA2000 1X, up to 153.6kbps data rate ( in
    average of 80 Kbps ),
  • CDMA2000 1xEV-DO, up to 2.4 Mbps data rate ( in
    average of 800 Kbps )
  • Lower infrastructure cost results from broad
    coverage
  • Low initial investment, then scale capital
    investment with the subscriber growth
  • The 450 MHz range has multiple bands available in
    many countries

37
CDMA450 Better choice for Broadband Access
  • It is particularly significant in rural areas
    where currently Internet access is slow dial-up
  • Remote education, telemedicine, agricultural and
    industrial support and government services are
    always accompanied by high data speed internet
    access requirements
  • CDMA450 is prettily suitable for broad coverage
    with lower cost vs. other expensive data access
    solutions
  • Enjoy roaming and always on service
  • Excellent feature of urban better coverage,
    results from the better radio propagation
  • Today 153 Kbps peak value of high-speed data
    service available, in average of around 70 Kbps,
    and late in EV-DO, provide 2.4 Mbps peak data
    rates service, in average of 800 Kbps

38
Summary of CDMA WLL Feature
  • Frequency
  • multiple choice 450M, 800M and 1900M
  • Maturity
  • widely application, more than 250 M subs over the
    world
  • Cost
  • The lowest cost per sub
  • broad coverage(30km for 450Mhz)
  • high integration
  • high spectral efficiency
  • Capacity
  • 1 CDMA frequency bandwidth 4 time GSM /4 time
    Analog /20 time DECT / 30 time PHS
  • Service
  • max. Data rate 153.6kbps,
  • Voice service, circuit data service, packet
    service
  • Evolution
  • evolve to 1xEV- DO or 1xEV-DV smoothly

39
System Feature Larger Coverage, Lower Cost
k subs
6
CDMA450 conventional coverage
CDMA450 extended coverage
5
4
Voice Capacity in 5MHz
GSM with high efficiency technology
3
WCDMA2100
2
GSM conventional coverage
GSM extended coverage
1
0
10km
1km
30km
Coverage
450MHz has the best radio propagation
40
System feature Multiple Transmission Modes
  • E1/T1
  • Optical fiber
  • HDSL
  • Microwave
  • Satellite

Satellite
BSC/PCF
E1/T1
SDH622/
iSiteC
HDSL
SDH2.5G
Softsite
Optical fiber
Microwave
Softsite
41
Projected WLL Subscribers by Region
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CDMA popular technologies in world
CDMA surpasses 212 Million global subscribers
SOURCE WWW.CDG.ORG
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subscribers in Asia Pacific and North America
Asia Pacific CDMA Subscriber Growth
HistoryDecember 1997 through June 2004 Percent
of total 41.8 Percent growth41 by year
SOURCE WWW.CDG.ORG
North America CDMA Subscriber Growth
HistoryDecember 1997 through June 2004 Percent
of total40.3 Percent growth 18 by year
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CDMA Worldwide Subscriber Growth Analysis
SOURCE WWW.CDG.ORG
One Year Period June 2003 through June 2004and
Second Quarter 2004 April, May, June
    Worldwide Growth Worldwide Growth Worldwide Growth Worldwide Growth
    One Year One Year 2nd Quarter 2004 2nd Quarter 2004
Region Jun-04 Subscribers Jun 03 - Jun 04 Percent Growth Mar 04- Jun 04 Percent Growth
Asia Pacific 88,800,000 25,710,000 41 4,400,000 5
North America 85,600,000 16,725,000 24 4,200,000 5
Caribbean Latin America 34,800,000 5,250,000 18 1,800,000 5
Europe, Middle East Africa 3,320,000 740,000 29 70,000 2
Total 212,520,000 48,425,000 30 10,470,000 5
45
CDMA 450 worldwide deployment
46
EVOLUTION OF CDMA2000
  • IT EMERGED FROM EIA/TIA IS-95 STANDARD
  • IMPROVED UPON REVERSE LINK
  • INTRODUCED ADVANCED VOCODING SERVICES
  • IMPROVED POWER CONTROL FUNCTIONS

47
TECHNICAL SUPERIORITY OF CDMA
  • LINE OF SIGHT IS NOT REQUIRED AS IN HIGHER
    FREQUENCY SYSTEMS
  • RANGE OF TRANSMISSION IS HIGHER THAN DECT/PHS
    SYSTEMS
  • BETTER COVERAGE, CAPACITY AND HIGHER DATA RATE
    AVAILABLE COMPARED TO AMPS, GSM ETC
  • LOWER PRICE COMPARED TO PROPERIETSRY SYSTEMS

48
COMPETETIVE ADVANTAGE
  • GREATER SPECTRAL EFFICIENCY-MORE THAN 35 USERS
    PER SECTOR PER 1.25MHz
  • SUPERIOR VOICE QUALITY-13 Kbps QCELP, 8 Kbps
    QCELP, EVRC, SMV
  • FEWER DROPPED CALLS-SOFT AND SOFTER HAND-OFF,
    CELL BREATHING
  • LOWER TRANSMISSION POWER-LONGER BATTERY LIFE-TIME
  • HIGHER DATA THROUGHPUT RATES-153 Kbps with
    release 0, 307.2Kbps with Release A
  • ENHANCED GLOBAL ROAMING CAPABILITY-MULTI-BAND,MULT
    I-MODE HANDSETS AVAILABLE
  • INHERRENT VOICE SECURITY-241 LENGTH PN SEQUENCE
  • DATA INTEGRITY-ADVANCED ENCRYPTION TECHNIQUES

49
COVERAGE ADVANTAGE
  • 450 AND 800 MHz SYSTEMS OFFER MORE COVERAGE
  • IN TRADITIONAL TDMA SYSTEMS SYNCHRONIZATION
    BETWEEN BTS AND SUBSCRIBER TERMINAL ARRISE BUT IN
    CDMA SYSTEMS..

50
VOICE CAPACITY ADVANTAGES
  • MORE THAN 45 ERLANGS OF VOICE CAPACITY PER SECTOR
    PER 1.25MHz CARRIER
  • 3-5 TIMES MORE CAPACITY THAN THAT OFFERED BY GSM
  • DOUBLE THAT OF IS-95

51
VOICE CAPACITY ADVANTAGES
52
DATA CAPACITY ADVANTAGES
  • SYSTEMS WITH FREQUENCIES HIGHER THAN 2.4 GHz
    REQUIRE MORE COSTLY INFRASTRUCTURE AND CUSTOMER
    PREMISES EQUIPMENT
  • DECT AND PHS HAVE TO SACRIFY VOICE FOR 64-128
    Kbps DATA RATES

53
DATA CAPACITY ADVANTAGES
54
DATA CAPACITY ADVANTAGES
55
3-G SERVICES
  • COLOURED LCD PHONE AND FIXED WIRELESS DEVICES
    AVAILABLE
  • CAMERA PHONES
  • CAMCORDER PHONES
  • VoD PHONES
  • GPS PHONES
  • PUSH TO TALK PHONES
  • MULTIMESDIA DEVICES FOR FULL TO LIMITED MOBILITY
  • SYNTHESIZED SOUNDS
  • MP3
  • USB CONNECTIVITY
  • SMS, EMS AND MMS
  • INTERNET BROWSING

56
HANDSET/FWT AVAILABILITY
  • FWTs MADE BY AUDIOVOX, AXESSTEL, HUAWEI,
    HYUNDAI-KURITEL, MOTOROLLA, LG etc
    etc.

57
Handset
  • Model similar to mobile phones viz. Huawei
    ETS388

58
FWT
  • Model similar to regular phone Huawei ETS2000

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THANK YOU
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WLL Technologies by Market Segment
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