Wireless Internet Telecommunications.

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Bibliographic Details
Online Access: Full Text (via IEEE)
Main Author: Wong
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Boston, MA : Artech House, 2004.
Subjects:

MARC

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245 1 0 |a Wireless Internet Telecommunications. 
260 |a Boston, MA :  |b Artech House,  |c 2004. 
300 |a 1 online resource (231 pages) 
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520 3 |a This comprehensive book gives you a hands-on understanding of the techniques and architectures being used to provide voice and data services over wireless networks. It serves as a unified "how it works" guide to wireless Internet telecommunications, systematically addressing each of the technological components and how they fit together. You get a clear picture of protocols like RTP for multimedia transport and SIP for session control signaling, and see what's being done to tackle tough challenges in QoS control, mobility management, and security in the wireless environment. The book discusses at length the cutting-edge IP Multimedia Sub-System (IMS) of UMTS to illustrate how each of these crucial components can be successfully implemented in a real-world wireless IP system.  |c Publisher abstract. 
588 0 |a Publisher's metadata. 
505 0 |a Wireless Internet Telecommunications -- Contents v -- Preface xi -- Acknowledgments xiii -- 1 Introduction 1 -- 1.1 An Exciting Future 1 -- 1.2 Requirements 3 -- 1.2.1 Technological Requirements 4 -- 1.3 Preview 6 -- 1.4 Themes and Principles 8 -- 1.5 Scope 11 -- 1.6 Summary 12 -- References 13 -- 2 The Internet 15 -- 2.1 Short History 17 -- 2.2 Routing 18 -- 2.2.1 Addressing 19 -- 2.2.2 Hierarchical Routing 23 -- 2.3 Protocols 23 -- 2.3.1 IP 24 -- 2.3.2 TCP 24 -- 2.4 Building the Internet 26 -- 2.4.1 The Internet in Practice 26 -- 2.4.2 Design Philosophy 28 -- 2.4.3 Applications 28 -- 2.4.4 New Requirements and Recent History 29 -- 2.5 Further Reading and Summary 30 -- References 30 -- 2.5 Appendix 2A The IP Header 30 -- 2A.1 IETF Working Groups 32 -- 3 Wireless Networks 35 -- 3.1 Short History 36 -- 3.2 Types of Wireless Networks 39 -- 3.2.1 Wireless Wide Area Network (WWAN): GSM 40 -- 3.2.2 Wireless Local Area Network (WLAN): 802.11 46 -- 3.2.3 Wireless Personal Area Network (WPAN): Bluetooth 49 -- 3.3 Summary 52 -- References 52 -- 3.3 Appendix 3A Brief Introduction to Aspects of the Wireless Physical Layer 53 -- 4 Multimedia over IP 55 -- 4.1 Motivation 56 -- 4.1.1 Efficient Digital Voice Coding 56 -- 4.1.2 Support for Different Levels of Quality and Different Media 57 -- 4.1.3 Network and Service Integration 57 -- 4.1.4 Statistical Multiplexing 57 -- 4.1.5 Assessment 58 -- 4.2 Requirements 59 -- 4.2.1 QoS and Transport Requirements 59 -- 4.2.2 Coding Requirements 59 -- 4.2.3 Other Network Elements 60 -- 4.2.4 Signaling Requirements 63 -- 4.3 Issues and Challenges 63 -- 4.4 Transport Protocols 64 -- 4.4.1 TCP 64 -- 4.4.2 UDP 65 -- 4.4.3 RTP 65 -- 4.5 Wireless Multimedia over IP 68 -- 4.6 Summary 69 -- References 69 -- 5 Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) 71 -- 5.1 Requirements for Session Initiation 73. 
505 8 |a 5.1.1 Basic Requirements and Characteristics 73 -- 5.1.2 Additional Requirements 74 -- 5.2 Fundamentals of SIP 74 -- 5.2.1 Locating Other SIP Users 76 -- 5.2.2 SIP Registration 80 -- 5.2.3 Session Parameter Negotiation 81 -- 5.2.4 SIP for Telephony and PSTN Interworking 81 -- 5.3 Digging Deeper 82 -- 5.3.1 Requests 83 -- 5.3.2 Responses 83 -- 5.3.3 More on SIP Proxies 85 -- 5.4 SDP, Parameter, and QoS Negotiations 86 -- 5.4.1 SDP Design Philosophy 86 -- 5.4.2 Using SDP with SIP 86 -- 5.5 SIP in Wireless Networks 87 -- 5.6 Summary 87 -- References 88 -- 5.6 Appendix 5A Notation 88 -- 5A.1 ISUP Signaling 88 -- 6 Mobility Management 91 -- 6.1 A Network-Level Solution: Mobile IP 92 -- 6.1.1 The Problem Addressed 92 -- 6.1.2 Mobile IP 92 -- 6.2 Mobility Concepts 100 -- 6.2.1 Location Management and Handoffs 100 -- 6.2.2 Types of Mobility 101 -- 6.2.3 Layer 2 Versus Layer 3 Mobility 104 -- 6.3 Alternative IP Mobility Schemes 105 -- 6.3.1 SIP-Based Mobility 106 -- 6.3.2 Transport-Layer Approaches 107 -- 6.3.3 Dynamic DNS 108 -- 6.4 Micromobility and Fast Handoff 109 -- 6.4.1 Hierarchical Mobile IP 110 -- 6.4.2 Host-Based Routing Schemes 111 -- 6.4.3 802.11 WLAN 113 -- 6.4.4 GPRS 115 -- 6.4.5 Other Fast Handoff Approaches 115 -- 6.4.6 Reducing the Impact of Handoff Latency 116 -- 6.5 Summary 116 -- References 117 -- 7 QoS 119 -- 7.1 Introduction 119 -- 7.2 IP QoS: Mechanisms 120 -- 7.2.1 Introduction to IP QoS 120 -- 7.2.2 Scope and Outline 121 -- 7.2.3 Requirements 121 -- 7.2.4 Resource Reservation 122 -- 7.2.5 Admission Control 123 -- 7.2.6 Packet Classification and Marking 125 -- 7.2.7 Queuing Disciplines 125 -- 7.2.8 Traffic Shaping 127 -- 7.2.9 Policing 129 -- 7.2.10 Routing Control and Traffic Engineering 130 -- 7.3 IP QoS Frameworks 131 -- 7.3.1 IntServ 132 -- 7.3.2 DiffServ 133 -- 7.4 QoS in Wireless Networks 135 -- 7.4.1 WLAN QoS Support 135. 
505 8 |a 12.2 IMS Architecture 218 -- 12.2.1 Relationship with GPRS 219 -- 12.2.2 Network Elements 220 -- 12.3 IMS Procedures 221 -- 12.3.1 Registration 221 -- 12.3.2 Basic Wireless-to-Wireless Call 223 -- 12.3.3 Changes for Roaming Caller or Roaming Called Party 225 -- 12.3.4 Changes for Wired Caller or Wired Called Party 225 -- 12.4 Summary 227 -- References 228 -- 13 Future Possibilities 229 -- 13.1 What Is 4G? 229 -- 13.2 Technology Projections 231 -- 13.3 A Complete Redesign or an Evolution? 231 -- 13.3.1 The 4G Revolution Based on 802.11 WLAN 232 -- 13.3.2 The 4G Evolution Based on Improvements to 3G 232 -- 13.3.3 The 4G Revolution Based on New Wireless Technologies 233 -- 13.3.4 The 4G Evolution and Revolution Based on Heterogeneous Network Integration 235 -- 13.4 A Transformation of Wireless IP Devices 236 -- 13.5 Summary and Conclusions 237 -- References 238 -- About the Author 239 -- Index 241 -- Mobile Communications Library. 
650 0 |a Wireless Internet. 
650 0 |a Wireless communication systems. 
650 7 |a Wireless communication systems  |2 fast 
650 7 |a Wireless Internet  |2 fast 
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