DocumentCode
454406
Title
Keynote: next generation architectures can dramatically reduce the 4G deployment cycle
Author
Shaver, D.
Author_Institution
Texas Instrum.
Volume
1
fYear
2006
fDate
6-10 March 2006
Abstract
Summary form only given. We have been "talking" about 4G systems emerging in 2010 for many years. However, to deploy these systems in 2010, we should already know with high confidence the 4G signal processing and SoC architectures for 4G handsets. It realistically takes 2 years to develop a power-efficient, cost competitive system-on-a-chip (SoC) for a volume market. There are standards to be completed, field trials, and wide scale acceptance before a system solution becomes viable. The entire cycle is at least 5 years. But, rather than giving up on 2010 as the year for 4G, we need to continue developing the right signal processing, network protocols, and SoC architectures given our knowledge of Moore\´s Law, emerging tools sets, and advanced receiver technology, which together facilitate rapid time-to-market of energy efficient solutions. The market winners will quickly adapt to the emerging 4G ecosystem and will develop solutions before others. This talk provides some historical perspectives on architectures and systems evolution with the goal of providing an optimistic view that 4G is very near
Keywords
4G mobile communication; protocols; signal processing; system-on-chip; time to market; 4G handsets; 4G systems; Moore Law; SoC architectures; advanced receiver technology; network protocols; signal processing;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Design, Automation and Test in Europe, 2006. DATE '06. Proceedings
Conference_Location
Munich
Print_ISBN
3-9810801-1-4
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/DATE.2006.243992
Filename
1656957
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