Hello Andy and others,

Andy is on the right track here, but we can easily end up with a never-ending 
round of improvements to the draft text :-)

One additional problem that will come from Andy's text proposal is the 
difference between spectrum 'allocation' and spectrum 'assigment'. ITU 
allocates spectrum to primary and secondary use, as Andy mentioned. Then it is 
the regional and national authorities that 'assign' spectrum to specific uses. 
The allocation to primary and secondary does not mean that both radio 
communication services would actually have an assignment to use that spectrum. 
So, to the extent that we remove primary and secondary from the draft, I would 
propose replacing 'allocated' with 'assigned'.

Kind regards,
Jussi

-----Original Message-----
From: ext [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: 27 January 2012 10:17
To: [email protected]; Kahtava Jussi (Nokia-CIC/Southwood); [email protected]
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [paws] re proposed edits on rev 2

Teco, Jussi, Nancy, (Scott, Raj)

I agree with your sentiment but in addition to the use of the term 
licence-exempt I also have a problem with primary and secondary. Primary and 
secondary (and tertiary) services have a particular meaning in ITU in relation 
to spectrum allocations, and we are giving the words a different meaning here 
in relation to users. When this PAWS protocol is later applied to non-TV bands, 
it might be radar (say) that is the primary use and fixed links or mobile (say) 
that is the secondary use, in ITU regulations. This will then conflict with 
calling white space operation secondary. How about this re-write of the 
abstract, considering "use" instead of "user" and avoiding "primary" and 
"secondary":

Portions of the radio spectrum that are allocated to a particular use but are 
unused or unoccupied at specific locations and times are defined as "white 
space". The concept of allowing additional transmissions (which may or may not 
be licensed) in white space is a technique to "unlock" existing spectrum for 
new use. An obvious requirement is that these additional transmissions do not 
interfere with the allocated use of the spectrum. One approach to using the 
white space spectrum at a given time and location is to verify with a database 
for available channels.

This document describes the concept of TV White Spaces. It also describes the 
problems that need to be addressed to enable white space spectrum for 
additional uses, without causing interference to currently allocated use, by 
querying a database which knows the channel availability at any given location 
and time. A number of possible use cases of white space spectrum and derived 
requirements are also described.

The parts of the Introduction etc from which this Abstract was originally 
derived will also need to be updated to match.

Regards

Andy


-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Teco 
Boot
Sent: 27 January 2012 09:07
To: [email protected]
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [paws] re proposed edits on rev 2

I suggest we keep our documents agnostic on exact specifications for this kind 
of terminology. The Rapid deployed network for emergency scenario says "free or 
freed spectrum". We can do a lot more with the protocol than just TVWS, or TVWS 
in country xx.

Teco


Op 27 jan. 2012, om 09:18 heeft <[email protected]> 
<[email protected]> het volgende geschreven:

> Dear Nancy,
>  
> My understanding is that 'unlicensed' is used in North America and 
> 'licence-exempt' in the UK. They do refer to the same thing, I think, so one 
> could say (licensed, unlicensed/licence-exempt).
>  
> Kind regards,
> Jussi
>  
> From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf 
> Of ext Nancy Bravin
> Sent: 27 January 2012 06:08
> To: Probasco Scott (Nokia-CIC/Dallas)
> Cc: [email protected]
> Subject: [paws] re proposed edits on rev 2
>  
> Dear Scott, Raj, and all,
>  
> Abstract
>  
>    Portions of the radio spectrum that are allocated to a licensed,
>    primary user but are unused or unoccupied at specific locations and
>    times are defined as "white space".  The concept of allowing
>    secondary transmissions (licensed or unlicensed) in white space is a
>    technique to "unlock" existing spectrum for new use.
> I would change (licensed or unlicensed) to: (licensed, licensed exempt or 
> unlicensed) as some countries have 3 categories.
>  Also, license exempt is mentioned in section 4.4
>  
>  
> SIncerely, Nancy
> _______________________________________________
> paws mailing list
> [email protected]
> https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/paws

_______________________________________________
paws mailing list
[email protected]
https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/paws
_______________________________________________
paws mailing list
[email protected]
https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/paws

Reply via email to