DocumentCode
2294887
Title
Effective wireless communication through application partitioning
Author
Watson, Terri
Author_Institution
Dept. of Comput. Sci. & Eng., Washington Univ., Seattle, WA, USA
fYear
1995
fDate
4-5 May 1995
Firstpage
24
Lastpage
27
Abstract
The comparatively severe network constraints imposed by mobile wireless computing require more careful management of communication resources than is typically necessary in the wired network. The performance characteristics of the wireless network are affected by a number of factors such as changes in location, environmental noise, cost constraints, and contention with other users. In addition, since even simple applications can quickly consume all the bandwidth on a slow link the contention introduced between applications will be significant. These dynamic changes in limited resources increase the difficulty of effective network management for a mobile device. This paper describes an approach in which the application specifies its interactions with the mobile device through a high-level application programming interface (API). This interface allows application functionality to be partitioned between mobile and stationary machines, increasing the autonomy of the mobile device through local operations. This in turn decreases user-perceived latency and wireless bandwidth requirements, while providing a framework to support disconnected operation. By exposing application-specific information to the system about data priority and access patterns the effectiveness of system-applied network optimizations is increased
Keywords
application program interfaces; local area networks; mobile communication; network operating systems; portable computers; wireless LAN; API; access patterns; application partitioning; application-specific information; communication resource management; contention; cost constraints; data priority; environmental noise; high-level application programming interface; limited resources; mobile device; mobile wireless computing; performance characteristics; severe network constraints; system-applied network optimization; user-perceived latency; wired network; wireless bandwidth requirements; wireless communication; Bandwidth; Computer network management; Computer networks; Costs; Mobile communication; Mobile computing; Resource management; Wireless communication; Wireless networks; Working environment noise;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Hot Topics in Operating Systems, 1995. (HotOS-V), Proceedings., Fifth Workshop on
Conference_Location
Orcas Island, WA
Print_ISBN
0-8186-7081-9
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/HOTOS.1995.513449
Filename
513449
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