Title :
Advanced cellular Internet service (ACIS)
Author :
Cimini, Leonard J., Jr. ; Chuang, Justin C I ; Sollenberger, Nelson R.
Author_Institution :
AT&T Bell Labs., USA
fDate :
10/1/1998 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
The public´s desire for mobile communications and computing, as evidenced by the popularity of cellular phones and laptop computers combined with the explosive demand for Internet access suggest a very promising future for wireless data services. The key to realizing this potential is the development and deployment of high-performance radio systems. In this article we describe a basic service concept, advanced cellular Internet service (ACIS), and the technologies for achieving reliable high-speed transmission to wide-area mobile and portable cellular subscribers with very high spectrum efficiency. Such a wireless service, optimized to meet the needs of a client-server model for information retrieval and Web browsing, and combined with evolutionary enhancements in second-generation technologies, can provide an attractive option for third-generation systems. The radio link design combines OFDM with transmit and receive antenna diversity and Reed-Solomon coding to overcome the link budget and dispersive fading limitations of the cellular mobile radio environment. For access, a dynamic packet assignment algorithm is proposed which combines rapid interference measurements, priority ordering, and a staggered frame assignment schedule to provide spectrum efficiencies of two-to-four times existing approaches
Keywords :
Internet; Reed-Solomon codes; cellular radio; client-server systems; diversity reception; fading; frequency division multiplexing; mobile antennas; modulation; packet radio networks; radiofrequency interference; receiving antennas; scheduling; transmitting antennas; ACIS; Internet access; OFDM; Reed-Solomon coding; Web browsing; advanced cellular Internet service; cellular mobile radio; client-server model; computing; dispersive fading; dynamic packet assignment algorithm; high-performance radio systems; information retrieval; interference measurements; link budget; mobile communications; orthogonal frequency division multiplexing; portable cellular subscribers; priority ordering; radio link design; receive antenna diversity; reliable high-speed transmission; spectrum efficiency; staggered frame assignment schedule; third-generation systems; transmit antenna diversity; wide-area mobile subscribers; wireless data services; Cellular phones; Explosives; Information retrieval; Mobile communication; OFDM; Portable computers; Radio link; Receiving antennas; Reed-Solomon codes; Web and internet services;
Journal_Title :
Communications Magazine, IEEE