Europe
Spain : Emerging mobile services are demanding an ever-increasing
amount of bandwidth, but the radio spectrum for third generation (3G)
and beyond systems is in short supply. Algorithms developed by European
researchers are helping operators better manage their precious bandwidth
resources.
The EVEREST project
developed and tested advanced algorithms to provide mobile operators
with enhanced Radio Resource Management (RRM) techniques aimed at
reducing the risk of communications bottlenecks at a time when mobile
devices are increasingly being used for much more than just voice
calls. Email, video conferencing, live television and streaming music,
together with a range of other emerging mobile services and applications
all increase the pressure on limited network resources.
“Operators will therefore
have to manage the scarce resources they have more efficiently if
they are to maintain service quality and increase network capacity
while meeting consumers’ demands for new services,” explains
Fernando Casadevall, coordinator of this IST project. “The goal
is for users to be provided with just the sufficient bandwidth necessary
to ensure end-to-end Quality of Service (QoS).”
RRM techniques to control
traffic, prioritise some services and clients over others, and switch
clients between different wireless communications systems depending
on their location and needs are an increasingly necessary feature
of network management. Operators benefit by being able to handle more
traffic and therefore more clients, while consumers receive better
quality services.
EVEREST’s approach
addressed heterogeneous networks in particular, where operators can
allocate traffic to different generations of communications systems
(from GSM and GPRS to UMTS and, eventually, beyond 3G systems) as
well as Wireless Local Area Networks (WLANs) depending on the types
of services being used.
“Clients who only
want to make a phone call can be switched over to GSM, thereby keeping
UMTS bandwidth free for people who are holding a video conference,
while automatic handover to high bandwidth WLANs in a building cuts
pressure on other networks,” Casadevall notes. “This balancing
of resources is essential as more and more applications with different
bandwidth needs are run over mobile devices.”
The advanced RRM algorithms
were validated under real-time and realistic conditions in a testbed
supporting Internet Protocol (IP)-based mobile multimedia applications
with end-to-end QoS capabilities.
The testbed is being used
by mobile operators involved in the project to test different RRM
techniques, while the algorithms themselves are public and available
for use by other operators. “Operators are likely to modify
them for their individual needs and use them commercially,”
Casadevall says.
The project partners
have also launched a follow-up IST project, AROMA, focusing on resource
management strategies and algorithms to guarantee end-to-end QoS in
the context of an all-IP heterogeneous network.