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Jun 20th 2002 
>From The Economist print edition

Wireless telecoms: Four disruptive technologies are emerging that promise to render 
not only the
next
wave of so-called 3G wireless networks irrelevant, but possibly even their 4G 
successors

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IT IS more than a century since Guglielmo Marconi pioneered wireless data 
transmission. Yet, if the
current pace of
innovation in the field is anything to go by, wireless technology is still in its 
infancy. The
surge in popularity of mobile
phones�their number will overtake that of fixed phones during 2002�has prompted both 
established
firms and
start-ups to investigate ways to make phones more efficient and versatile. At the same 
time, the
Internet is going
wireless, driving a separate wave of innovation as the Internet's legendary ability to 
disrupt
traditional ways of doing
things enters a new arena.

It is too early to see where all this might be leading, or even how these two waves of 
wireless
enthusiasm will fit
together. But the parlous state of the wireless-telecoms industry, and the 
difficulties surrounding
the deployment of
�third generation� (3G) networks in particular, could be taken as evidence that 
existing ways of
doing things are
reaching their limits, and that some radical new ideas are needed.

Here, then, are four emerging technologies that show much promise: smart antennas, 
mesh networks,
ad hoc
architectures, and ultra-wideband transmission. Smart antennas are already in use and 
mesh networks
are starting to
appear, while ad hoc architectures and ultra-wideband are still largely restricted to 
the
laboratory. But each
challenges existing ways of doing things; each, on its own, or in combination with 
others, could
shake up the wireless
world.


Smart stuff

Wireless antennas, in their simplest form, are dumb. A base-station on a 
cellulartelephony network,
for example,
typically communicates with nearby handsets by broadcasting in all directions, which 
is rather like
shouting to ensure
that everyone in a small room can hear you. Base-stations use only a fraction of the 
radio spectrum
available, to
avoid interference with adjacent cells, but the use of directional antennas enables 
radio
frequencies to be reused
more efficiently, thus boosting capacity. So instead of one omni-directional antenna, 
many
base-stations now use
three-directional antennas pointing in different directions, each of which covers a 
120� sector.

Smart antenna systems go a step further, using multiple antennas to provide more 
accurate
directional targeting and
additional improvements in efficiency. �The base-station works out where you are from 
the relative
signal strengths
at multiple antennae,� explains Marc Goldburg of ArrayComm, a smart-antenna firm based 
in San Jose,
California.
�Then it can direct its transmission.� ArrayComm's IntelliCell technology is now 
deployed in nearly
100,000
base-stations in Japan, China and Taiwan. Adding IntelliCell technology to a 
base-station typically
boosts capacity
by a factor of three to seven, says Mr Goldburg. Metawave, another smart-antenna firm 
that is based
in Redmond,
Washington, claims similar benefits for its SmartCell �cell sculpting� technology.

In theory, says Fran�ois Chin, a researcher at the Institute for Communications 
Research in
Singapore, the capacity enhancement is proportional to the number of antennas, but in
practice it is only possible to achieve about three-quarters of this improvement. His
systems, which are being tested in Tokyo by NTT DoCoMo, Japan's leading wireless
operator, typically achieve a five-fold capacity improvement with eight antennas. It 
is thus
possible to support either more users, or the same number of users at a higher data 
rate, or
to reduce the number of base-stations needed to provide a particular level of service.

The plunging cost of processing power means that smart antennas, which started out as 
an
expensive military technology, are now a cheaper way to increase network capacity than
building new base-stations. Yet the response of big infrastructure suppliers such as 
Nokia,
Ericsson, Lucent and Nortel has been lukewarm. Nokia says there is no need for 
smart-antenna
technology, because
the price of base-stations is also falling fast. Ericsson, Lucent and Nortel have 
their own
versions of the technology,
but are not pushing it to operators. Marty Cooper, ArrayComm's chief executive, who 
pioneered
cellular telephony at
Motorola, smells a rat. �Manufacturers determine what technologies are used�and they 
want to sell
more
base-stations,� he says.

But smart-antenna firms hope that the advent of 3G will work in their favour, since 3G 
networks
will require far more
base-stations than existing 2G networks, in order to provide extra capacity for 
graphics, video and
other new
services. The option to provide some of this extra capacity via smart antennas, rather 
than
additional base-stations,
ought to appeal to operators. �3G has driven the need for our technology to the 
surface,� says Dr
Cooper. He hopes
that operators will put pressure on infrastructure suppliers to offer base-stations 
with smart
antennas, and expects
the technology to be ubiquitous by 2010.




In the meantime, ArrayComm is pushing ahead with a technology of its own, called 
i-Burst. It claims
that i-Burst
offers far better performance than 3G networks at a fraction of the cost. 
Retro-fitting smart
antennas on to cellular
networks can go only so far, says Mr Goldburg, because cellular networks were not 
designed with
smart antennas in
mind. By contrast, i-Burst is a mobile wireless-data technology that was designed 
specifically to
exploit smart
antennas. Compared with 3G, Mr Goldburg reckons it is about 40 times more efficient.

The fact is that i-Burst base-stations�equipped with smart antennas and colocated with 
the base
stations of a 2G
network�can provide a throughput of one megabit (1m bits) per second, at about 
one-thirtieth of the
cost of
building a 3G network for the same area. Thus, i-Burst plugs the gap between 3G 
networks
(long-range, but capable
of 384 kilobits per second) and the popular WI-FI wireless-network standard used to 
connect laptops
to the Internet
(short-range, and capable of 11 megabits per second). At the moment, the i-Burst 
receiver is a
brick-like object
about the size of a video cassette that fits on to the lid of a laptop, and draws 
about as much
power as a
WI-FIPC-card. But ArrayComm's licensees, including Kyocera, a Japanese electronics 
conglomerate,
expect to be able
to produce i-Burst receivers as PC-cards.

ArrayComm is pushing i-Burst in three separate ways. The company has bought spectrum 
in Australia
and plans to
launch a commercial service there in 2003. Hanaro Telecom of South Korea plans to 
launch i-Burst as
a wireless
broadband service this summer. ArrayComm is also trying to persuade firms that operate
cellular-network towers on
behalf of wireless operators to install i-Burst equipment. In short, Dr Cooper hopes 
that i-Burst
will cut two
technological Gordian knots at the same time, providing fast mobile-data access, and 
also a
wireless solution to the
�last mile� problem of providing high-speed broadband access to the home.


A relay race

Proponents of mesh networks also believe that they have found a way around the 
last-mile problem.
At the moment,
there are two main ways to provide broadband connections to the home: use either the 
local cable-TV
network or a
digital subscriber-line (DSL) from the local telephone company. DSL supercharges 
ordinary phone
lines to enable them
to carry data at high speed.

But not every neighbourhood has cable access, and DSL works only for subscribers close 
to a
telephone exchange.
Worse, the roll-out of broadband has been held back by obstructive telecoms 
incumbents, regulatory
obstacles and
infighting. No wonder the idea of a fixed wireless broadband service, blanketing a 
neighbourhood
with connectivity
without the need to lay any cables, seems so seductive.

The mesh-networking approach, which is being pursued by several firms, does this in a 
particularly
clever way. First,
the neighbourhood is �seeded� by the installation of a �neighbourhood access point� 
(NAP)�a radio
base-station
connected to the Internet via a high-speed connection. Homes and offices within range 
of this NAP
install antennas
of their own, enabling them to access the Internet at high speed.

Then comes the clever part. Each of those homes and offices can also act as a relay 
for other homes
and offices
beyond the range of the original NAP. As the mesh grows, each node communicates only 
with its
neighbours, which
pass Internet traffic back and forth from the NAP. It is thus possible to cover a 
large area
quickly and cheaply.

For providing fixed-wireless access, the mesh approach is technically superior to the 
traditional
�point-to-multipoint�
radio approach in a number of ways. For one thing, it requires much less power. Rather 
than using
high power to get
around obstacles, mesh networks offer multiple paths from one node to another; with 
systems
typically being
self-configuring so that, like the Internet, traffic is sent by the quickest route. 
Also like the
Internet, mesh networks
are robust and can be scaled up easily.

Another drawback of point-to-multipoint systems, observes Dave Beyer of Nokia's 
wireless-routers
division, is their
need for tall antennas to get above the clutter and maximise their coverage. 
Unfortunately, they
then run into the
problem of interference with adjacent cells. Mesh networks, in contrast, can use 
rooftop antennas,
since each node
needs only to be able to communicate with its neighbours. Such systems use 
one-ten-thousandth of
the
transmission power. That, in turn, means they can use unlicensed spectrum.

A number of firms are now pushing mesh-network technology as the fastest and easiest
way to provide broadband Internet access. Following a successful trial in Santa Rosa,
California, Nokia's system, called RoofTop, is being rolled out by more than 50 
operators,
mainly small Internet service-providers (ISPs). The ISP installs an AirHead unit 
(Nokia's
name for a NAP) to seed a neighbourhood, and a small, weatherproof pod with an
omni-directional antenna is fixed to the outside of each subscriber's home or office. 
Each
pod costs around $800�less if produced in large quantities. Vista Broadband, which 
offers a
broadband service using RoofTop technology in Santa Rosa, charges around $200 for
installation, and then a monthly fee of $50.

SkyPilot, a mesh-networks start-up based in Menlo Park, California, is taking a similar
approach. Its rooftop units use smart antennas to beam data back and forth, enabling
frequencies to be reused more efficiently and increasing capacity. Duncan Davidson, the
firm's boss, says the Internet/mesh approach has many advantages over the traditional 
circuit-based
approach used
in telephony. �The Internet architecture gets better with density [whereas] the phone 
system gets
worse,� he says.

The problem with the mesh approach, however, is how to get it off the ground. Who will 
build the
NAPs to seed a
neighbourhood? Unlike Nokia, which simply sells its RoofTop gear to ISPs, SkyPilot 
plans to help
prime the pump itself,
by setting up NAPs and allowing ISPs to resell access. This approach also has 
technical merit:
multiple overlapping
mesh networks are far less efficient than a network in which all the nodes can talk to 
each other.
So it makes sense
to have competition at the ISP level, rather than the infrastructure level.

Perhaps the most ambitious vision of mesh networking is that of MeshNetworks, a firm 
based in
Maitland, Florida. It
has developed its own radio hardware and some clever routing software that makes it 
possible to
blanket an area
with broadband wireless coverage using �intelligent access points� (its term for NAPs) 
and
shoebox-sized wireless
routers. But what is really clever is that this wireless mesh-network then supports 
mobile devices,
such as handheld
computers and laptops. And those devices can also act as routers for other mobile 
devices, further
extending the
mesh. Cleverest of all, even when two or more devices are beyond the range of a NAP or 
a wireless
router, they
spontaneously form their own local network. MeshNetworks' technology thus combines the 
mesh
architecture with
the even more radical approach of �ad hoc� networking.


>From the battlefield

As the name suggests, ad hoc networks consist of multiple devices, each of which also 
acts as a
router for the
others. Furthermore, these devices may also be moving, so that the network topology is 
in constant
flux. This poses
a number of challenges, not least in routing. Clearly, the quickest way to send a 
packet of data
from one device to
another changes as the devices move around, and other devices join and leave the 
network.

Ad hoc networks are commonly associated with military and emergency applications, both 
of which
have to operate
in situations where there is no network infrastructure. For that reason, ad hoc 
networks are
sometimes referred to as
�infrastructureless� network architectures. Rescue workers in an earthquake zone, for 
example,
could use handheld
radios, each of which also acts as a relay for other nearby radios. Similarly, the 
robust,
self-healing properties of ad
hoc networks make them suitable for military use, either by mobile combatants, or to 
connect up
�smart dust�
sensors that would be sprinkled across a battlefield from an aircraft.

For many years, says Zygmunt Haas, a researcher at Cornell University, most research 
into ad hoc
networks focused
on military applications. Recently, however, interest in the field has increased as 
its commercial
possibilities have
started to emerge. �Bluetooth�, a short-range wireless protocol that enables mobile 
phones to talk
to nearby
handheld computers, printers and other phones, is a simple form of ad hoc networking, 
though it
supports only single
�hops� between individual devices.

The advent of WI-FI networking equipment has also provided a foothold. With the right 
software, it
is possible to
allow WI-FI-equipped laptops to act as relays for other nearby machines, letting 
packets make
multiple hops from
machine to machine to get to and from the Internet. Dave Johnson, an ad hoc researcher 
at Rice
University in
Houston, Texas, has built demonstration systems based on WI-FI devices in moving cars 
that do
exactly this.

Ad hoc networking might also expand the capabilities of mobile phones. People 
attending the
�Burning Man� festival in
the Nevada desert would then be able to call each other, even without any local 
infrastructure,
suggests Charles
Perkins, an ad hoc guru at Nokia's research centre in Mountain View, California. As 
well as working
without any
infrastructure, ad hoc-capable mobile phones would have other advantages. In a crowded 
environment,
such as a
sports arena, phones could pass traffic from other phones to base-stations in adjacent 
cells, thus
boosting capacity.
Calls between users within the arena could be handled locally, without loading the 
cellular
network.

The ad hoc/cellular hybrid approach would also improve coverage at the edges of a 
cellular
network, since users just outside the network's range would be able to �hop� their 
calls into
the network via somebody else's phone; in the process, they would extend the effective
size of the network, allowing still more distant users to �multihop� their way in. No 
wonder
Nokia and other mobile-infrastructure manufacturers are keeping a close eye on ad hoc
networking.

But there are still several problems to overcome. The first is a conflict of interest: 
do you
really want somebody in another row of seats using your phone as a relay and draining 
your
battery? The trade-off, says Dr Haas, is that the service quality improves for all, at 
the
cost of handling each other's traffic. Some proposed ad hoc architectures, he says, 
include
micro-payment schemes to ensure that everybody pulls their weight.

Another difficulty is agreeing on protocols; ad hoc will work only if devices are 
ubiquitous, and
support an agreed
standard. But different situations require different standards. This may require 
hybrid, adaptive
protocols, where the
network's behaviour adjusts depending on the circumstances.

The ad hoc approach is also favoured by proponents of ultra-wideband (UWB) 
transmission. UWB marks
a radical
departure from existing wireless technologies because, rather than transmitting and 
receiving on a
particular radio
frequency, it involves transmitting very short pulses on a wide range of frequencies 
simultaneously
at low power.
Such pulses, which are typically less than a billionth of a second long, pass 
unnoticed by
conventional radio
receivers, but can be detected by a UWB receiver. Information is encoded into streams 
of pulses,
millions of which
can be sent every second, by varying their polarity or their timing relative to an 
apparently
random but pre-arranged
schedule. (A slightly early pulse might signify a one, and a late pulse a zero.)

UWB has been struggling to establish itself for years. That is because its 
unconventional approach
requires regulatory
approval. But its fortunes received a massive boost in February 2002, when America's 
Federal
Communications
Commission (FCC) gave limited approval for UWB transmissions, despite the objections 
of air-traffic
controllers and
telecoms firms worried that they might interfere with their existing networks. Similar 
moves are
expected to follow in
Europe and Asia, says Jim Baker of Time Domain, a leading UWB firm based in 
Huntsville, Alabama.

The FCC ruling limits the range of UWB transmissions to about ten metres, although 
longer ranges
may be allowed in
future once the question of interference has been sorted out. However, UWB is capable 
of a data
rate of at least
100 megabits per second over such distances. So the way is now clear for commercial 
UWB products to
provide
wireless links between, say, personal computers and camcorders or music-players. Work 
is well
advanced on a
standard to enable UWB devices and peripherals to locate and communicate with each 
other. Such is
the interest in
the technology that heavyweights such as Intel are now actively investigating it, in 
addition to
UWB firms such as
Time Domain, Pulse-Link and Xtreme Spectrum.

Cellonics, a Singapore-based firm, has an interesting twist on UWB. Inspired by the 
firing of nerve
cells, it has
developed a circuit that generates high-frequency bursts of short pulses in response 
to an input
signal, and which
lends itself to UWB encoding. Cellonics recently demonstrated a short-range UWB system 
capable of
transmitting at
11.4 megabits per second. It expects the first commercial applications for UWB to be in
wireless-networking
equipment for homes and offices. When higher-power transmission is allowed, says Lye 
Hoeng Fai, the
firm's boss, he
expects UWB to appear in cellular systems.

Together, UWB and ad hoc architectures are a natural fit, since the UWB devices will 
have to locate
each other and
start communicating automatically, tasks that ad hoc networking readily facilitates. 
The two
technologies are
thought to have been used together in military applications for some time. UWB pulses, 
emitted
apparently at
random, are very difficult to detect or intercept, and are ideal for battlefield 
transmissions. UWB
pulses can also be
used for medical imaging, high-resolution radar, and proximity detection. But it is 
their potential
use in
communications that is arousing the most interest. Looking beyond 3G networks, and the 
patchwork of
WI-FI and
cellular networks that is often referred to as 4G, some are even referring to 
infrastructureless,
ad hoc UWB networks
as 5G.


Turned upside down

There is thus no shortage of new wireless technologies. But how these and other 
innovations will
shape
communications networks remains to be seen. On the one hand, there is a clear trend 
towards
consolidation in
wireless telecoms�with the likelihood being that there will be only a handful of 
global wireless
operators by 2010. On
the other, many emerging wireless technologies seem to signal a move to a less 
informal, more
decentralised model
along the lines of the Internet. Dr Johnson at Rice University suggests that ad hoc 
networking will
create more scope
for �mom and pop� network operators and free community networks, all stitched together 
in a casual,
ever-shifting
web.

Network operators will still be needed to carry long-haul traffic, but their role 
could become less
(rather than more)
important in future. In the process, the entire structure of the industry could shift 
from a
top-down approach to one
that is organised from the bottom up. There are already signs of this happening in the 
emerging
area of commercial
WI-FI networks, which allow individuals to club together to form a larger network. The 
business
models and billing
systems remain uncertain. But one thing is clear: it is still very early days for 
wireless data.


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