Self-configuring multifunction mobile terminals

http://www.innovations-report.com/html/reports/information_technology/report-32823.html

Software Defined Radios (SDRs) are mobile devices that
can be reconfigured over the air. Users could download
new services from network operators, and even have
voice and email services provided by different
networks. The SCOUT project has studied how SDRs will
be regulated and marketed. 

"From the high level perspective, mobile terminal
evolution will drive network evolution," says Markus
Dillinger of Siemens AG and SCOUT coordinator. "SDR
Mobile terminals will evolve more and more
capabilities. You could be connected, simultaneously,
to a Wireless LAN network and UMTS or GPRS. I could
check my emails whilst receiving phone calls." 

The project has considered some of the big questions
and started the debate in new areas. These include
user, operator and regulator requirements in cellular
and ad hoc networks, new business models for the
reconfigurable mobile terminal, and procedures for
managing the downloaded software on reconfigurable
terminals. 

"Telecom regulators have an interest in the
deregulation of radio spectrum, which in turn could
lead to new services and new ways of providing
services, and which could drive the EU economy one
step further," comments Dillinger."At the moment,
frequency bands are allocated according to services,
but one might consider refarming spectrum so that, for
example, UMTS could operate in GSM frequency bands." 

Achieving a coherent European view on frequency
spectrum use and deregulation is difficult. Each
country has its own issues and regulation policies are
markedly different in, say, France, Germany and the
UK. Nevertheless, one of the members of the SCOUT
consortium was the German Regulator,
Regulierungsbehörde für Telekommunikation und Post,
which generated a questionnaire directed at
manufacturers: what factors are important, what should
be controlled by regulators, do regulators have a role
to play vis-à-vis SDR? This has opened up the debate
to a wider public and put SDR on the agenda. 

More than a standard issue 

"We’ve also considered so-called adaptive multiphase
standards," adds Dillinger. "If you have a mobile
terminal that can be reconfigured via the network, why
should we have to wait for a fully-matured standard to
be drawn up? You could reduce the time to market if a
minimal standard was published and, as new parts were
agreed, mobile terminals could download upgrades as
required." 

Agreement on the original GSM standard was relatively
quick, because it was a small group of European
interests. UMTS has taken longer to become adopted
partly because discussions had to take place on a
worldwide basis. "The next generation, 4G, may well
take even longer unless the approach we take to
standards improves. It’s difficult to please everyone
and, in practice, not all aspects of the standard [or
specification] may be in place within the prescribed
discussion period," comments Dillinger. 

Cognitive radio is a concept that takes into account
the users’ preferences and immediate environment. "The
mobile terminal would realise that you don’t want to
download large email attachments while you’re in a
metro train, and would only download the message
headers," says Dillinger. "The terminal could also
decide to use a UMTS connection rather than a Wireless
LAN connection because it provided a better service or
cheaper tariff at the user’s location." 

Research shows that one of the most commonly-voiced
user preference is the ability to roam across
networks. For the SDR, this means not only roaming
from one service provider to another, but from one
technology to another: Wireless LAN, GSM, GPRS, UMTS,
etc. "Roaming would very much be the enabler for SDR
flexibility," says Dillinger. "What’s more, if there’s
a need, reconfigurability could be used to provide
even more services to the end user." 

What technology should be used in these SDR mobile
terminals? According to Dillinger: "Well-known
standards, such as GSM and UMTS, are sufficiently
stable and well-understood to have been committed to
ASIC [Application Specific Integrated Circuit] early
on, the programming of which is usually fixed at the
time of manufacture. "But there are other devices,
such as DSPs [Digital Signal Processors] and FPLAs
[Field-programmable Logic Arrays] that are eminently
suited to providing the processing power in an SDR
because they can easily be reprogrammed." 

The conflict between the classical standards approach
and the IETF [Internet Engineering Task Force] still
dominates how SDRs will be controlled. "To what extent
should SDRs be supported by networks," says Dillinger.
"At one extreme, you have UMTS and GSM networks that
are controlled by operators, and at the other you have
Wireless LAN networks that are privately owned and
autonomous. We need to strike a balance that will,
ultimately, stimulate economic growth. At the end of
the day, however, you have to prove that spectrum
deregulation is beneficial." 





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