event: gsc-11 chicago date: may 29, 2006 slide 1 werner mohr siemens ag – on behalf of wwi wwi –...
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Event: GSC-11 Chicago
Date: May 29, 2006
Slide 1
Werner Mohr
Siemens AG – on behalf of WWI
WWI – Contributing to prosperous global mobile communications
WWI – Contributing to prosperous global mobile communications
Discovering the Wireless World in a user friendly environment
GSC11_OPEN_24a1
Event: GSC-11 Chicago
Date: May 29, 2006
Slide 2
Trends and future developments Mission and objective of WWI WWI organisation WWI projects in Phase II
– MobiLife– SPICE– Ambient Networks II– WINNER II– E2R II– MOCCA – Liaison project
Relation to WWRF Conclusions
Outline
Event: GSC-11 Chicago
Date: May 29, 2006
Slide 5
Vision 2010: A picture from the future
Source: Siemens AG
Event: GSC-11 Chicago
Date: May 29, 2006
Slide 6
IMT-2000
1 10 100 1000
NewMobileAccess
New Nomadic / LocalArea Wireless Access
EnhancedIMT-2000
Enhancement
New Radio Interface
Medium
Low
High
Mobility
Communication speed / Carrier bitrate (Mbit/s)
Low Medium High
• ITU-R Framework Recommendation M.1645
• System capabilities as targets for research and investigation
• Starting point for the establishment of WWI
Targets for mobile systems B3G
Source: ITU-R
Event: GSC-11 Chicago
Date: May 29, 2006
Slide 8
Mobilising the European contribution to the Wireless World
To define, design and validate systems and functions that provide:
– Users with an excellent user experience,– While minimising the financial investment required
WWI Objective
WWI Mission
WWI Mission and Objective
Source: WWI
Event: GSC-11 Chicago
Date: May 29, 2006
Slide 9
WWI comprises a series of complementary cooperating projects in Framework Program 6 of the EU
To elaborate a common vision on a beyond 3G system concept
To promote the shared vision on a world-wide basis
To promote pre-standardisation activities between the players of the global mobile market, including vendors, network operators, service providers, regulators and research communities
WWI strategy
Source: WWI
Event: GSC-11 Chicago
Date: May 29, 2006
Slide 10
User-centricity means that the users’ needs, expectations and requirements will be considered and supported by all system levels, from access and core networks to service platforms and applications
User CentricityMultiSphere ConceptMultiSphere Concept
WWI key concept
Source: WWRF
Event: GSC-11 Chicago
Date: May 29, 2006
Slide 11
Europe
Asia
Canada& US
Australia
• Over 100 different organisations, over 50 academic institutions
• Over 700 people working within WWI projects
• Network operators, manufacturers, universities, R&D centres and several SME’s are partners in the projects
• Almost every European Member State is represented. Australia, Canada, China, Israel, Japan, Korea, Norway, Singapore and Switzerland are also represented by partners in the projects
Source: WWI
WWI international collaboration
Event: GSC-11 Chicago
Date: May 29, 2006
Slide 12
Current WWI Cross Issues
Source: WWI
WWI projects
Migration
User acceptance
WWI Coordination Team
WWI Steering Board
Validation
System interfaces
Business models
Phase I WWI Integrated Projects
Liaisons
S4ALL
MOCCA
WINNER E2RAN MobiLife SPICE
Phase II WWI Integrated Projects
Event: GSC-11 Chicago
Date: May 29, 2006
Slide 13
Three phases of WWI
Phase IPhase I Phase I IPhase I I Phase I I IPhase I I I
Month 1 Month 24 Month 48 Month 72
• Scenario Analysis
• Requirements Capture
• Definition of Assessment Criteria
• Identification of Key Technologies
• Technology Design and Evaluation
• Definition of Ubiquitous System Concept
• Performance Estimation
• Complexity Estimation
• Input to Regulation
• Training Activities
• Detailed Definition of Ubiquitous System Concept
• Evaluation of newly developed Technologies
• Detailed System Design, Optimisation and Refinement
• Detailed Performance and Complexity Estimate
• Validation via Modelling
• Contributions to Standardisation and Regulation
• Preparation of Trials
• Training Activities
• Investigation of Implementation related issues
• Hardware Validation
• Trials
• Final and Optimisation of the ubiquitous System Concept based on Feedback from Trials
• Continuous Contributions to Standardisation and Regulation towards a global Standard
• Training Activities
Phase IPhase I Phase I IPhase I I Phase I I IPhase I I I
Month 1 Month 24 Month 48 Month 72
• Scenario Analysis
• Requirements Capture
• Definition of Assessment Criteria
• Identification of Key Technologies
• Technology Design and Evaluation
• Definition of Ubiquitous System Concept
• Performance Estimation
• Complexity Estimation
• Input to Regulation
• Training Activities
• Detailed Definition of Ubiquitous System Concept
• Evaluation of newly developed Technologies
• Detailed System Design, Optimisation and Refinement
• Detailed Performance and Complexity Estimate
• Validation via Modelling
• Contributions to Standardisation and Regulation
• Preparation of Trials
• Training Activities
• Investigation of Implementation related issues
• Hardware Validation
• Trials
• Final and Optimisation of the ubiquitous System Concept based on Feedback from Trials
• Continuous Contributions to Standardisation and Regulation towards a global Standard
• Training Activities
Source: WWI
Event: GSC-11 Chicago
Date: May 29, 2006
Slide 15
Life Goes Mobile with MobiLife Overall MobiLife Objectives
Bring advances in mobile applications and serviceswithin the reach of users in their everyday life
by innovating and deploying new applications and servicesbased on the evolving capabilities of 3G systems and beyond
Bring advances in mobile applications and serviceswithin the reach of users in their everyday life
by innovating and deploying new applications and servicesbased on the evolving capabilities of 3G systems and beyond
R&D new applications,services and frameworks
R&D new applications,services and frameworks
R&D enabling technologies forapplications and services
R&D enabling technologies forapplications and services
Explore and remove hurdles betweenservice development and deployment
Explore and remove hurdles betweenservice development and deployment
Integrate and exploit existing and new service components/enablers/technologies
Integrate and exploit existing and new service components/enablers/technologies
Demonstrate and disseminateDemonstrate and disseminate
Existing “Mass-Market”Environments
Existing “Mass-Market”Environments
Advanced Existing and NearFuture Environments
Advanced Existing and NearFuture Environments
Non-Existing Further FutureEnvironments
Non-Existing Further FutureEnvironments
Future Communication SystemsFuture Communication Systems
Ev
olu
tio
n
Re
vo
luti
on
Co
nv
erg
en
ce
Technologies
User Needs
Business
Models
Source: MobiLife
IST-511607
Event: GSC-11 Chicago
Date: May 29, 2006
Slide 17
OtherServiceplatform
EnablersCookbook
Life-Cycle
Generic components
ComponentInfrastructure
ServiceBrokering &mediation
SemanticPublication
SemanticDiscovery
Exposure Mechanisms
Network Enablers
Service creation
Service execution
AdaptiveServiceRoamingdelivery
WP5
2.4
Charging& Billing
Component Ontologies & Semantic Description repositories
SemanticOrchestration
WP6
Semantic resourceacquisition
SPICE platform
Service enablersSPICE
Source: SPICE
Event: GSC-11 Chicago
Date: May 29, 2006
Slide 19
• Realising the need for transient, spontaneous merging of heterogeneous networks & network resources (“composition” of networks)
• Enabling competitive & cooperative networking (with limited sharing of resources & functions)
• Common Control facilities of networks
• Migration & Integration of legacy networks & technologies
Network A+B
AmbientConnectivity
Network B
AmbientConnectivity
Network A
Source: Ambient Networks
Ambient Networks beyond 3G
Event: GSC-11 Chicago
Date: May 29, 2006
Slide 22
Flexible radio interface
Source: WINNER
Spectrum Flexibility
Cooperation
User-centricity
carrier frequencyunlicensed
ba
nd
wid
th
2G 2G 3G B3G
BS
VHO
VHO
GSM / GPRS
UMTS
WINNER
Medium Access Control
Spatial Processing
BS
Multihop Deployment
Segmentation, FEC Coding
Resource scheduling buffer
Resource scheduler
Source: WINNER
Event: GSC-11 Chicago
Date: May 29, 2006
Slide 23
E2R II enabler of seamless experience
E2R II enabler of seamless experience
End-to-End Reconfigurability
is the key enabler for providing a seamless
experience to the end-user and the
operators:
Managing and increasing resilience of growingly complex
architectures
Reducing costs of communication
systems
Providing flexibility to developers of services
and applications
Beyond 3G (B3G) Systems
Source: E2R
Event: GSC-11 Chicago
Date: May 29, 2006
Slide 25
Event: The International Conference on Beyond 3G
Date: October 18 and 19, 2005, Shanghai, China
Slide 25
MOCCA Scope The scope is to address mobile and wireless issues
within: Research Programs in European Research Area
(ERA) and in Asia and the US, Researchers and projects in the ERA and their
counterparts in the developing regions of the world Collaboration on the research and development
of future mobile and wireless systems, including services and applications
MOCCA Strategic Objective MOCCA will facilitate European and international
collaboration on future mobile and wireless systems and their applications paving the way towards harmonised international standards
Scope and Objective
Source: MOCCA
Event: GSC-11 Chicago
Date: May 29, 2006
Slide 27
MOCCA/WWI WorkshopMarch 30, 2006
MOCCA/WWI WorkshopMarch 30, 2006
Source: WWI
1. 0900 – 0930
1.1 Welcome DoCoMo Euro-Labs / NiCT 1.2 Technical approach to WWI Henrik Abramowicz, Ericsson
2.a 0930 – 2.1 Introduction Mika Klemettinen, Nokia 2.2 User centric research methodologies and evaluating user acceptance Mika Klemettinen, Nokia 2.3 Context management Matthias Wagner, DoCoMo Eurolabs 2.4 Novel service architecture Johan Hjelm, Ericsson
2.b 1100 – 2.5 Service platform issues Christophe Cordier, France Telecom 2.6 Studies on users and requirements of emerging markets Fiona Williams, Ericsson
3. 1140 – 3.1 Introduction Didier Bourse, Motorola 3.2 WWI approach to business modeling Olivier Braet, VUB 3.3 Key security solutions in WWI Peter Schoo, DoCoMo Eurolabs
4. 1400 – 4.1 Introduction Henrik Abramowicz , Ericsson 4.2 The Ambient Networks architecture Norbert Niebert, Ericsson 4.3 E2R system architecture and reconfiguration management plane (RMP) Zachos Boufidis, University of Athens 4.4 Multi-radio access architecture Johan Lundsjö, Ericsson 4.5 The key to dynamic reconfigurability in RUNES and ARTEMIS,
the European initiative within Embedded SystemsAndrás Toth, Ericsson
5. 1600 – 5.1 Introduction Jörn von Häfen, Siemens 5.2 Overview of WINNER system concept Jörn von Häfen, Siemens 5.3 Air interface principles Göran Klang, Ericsson 5.4 Coding techniques for new air interfaces Thierry Lestable, Samsung 5.5 Reconfigurable Radio Resource and Spectrum Management Panagiotis Demestichas , UPRC 5.6 EVEREST’s view on Radio Resource Management Strategies for 3G and Beyond Oriol Sallent, UPC
6. 1745 – 6.1 Summary & Conclusions Henrik Abramowicz, Ericsson
SpeakerTopic
1140
1140
1245
1525
1745
1800
Event: GSC-11 Chicago
Date: May 29, 2006
Slide 29
Conclusions
WWI comprises a series of complementary cooperating projects in Framework Program 6 of the EU
Major stakeholders from the– manufacturer– network operator– R&D center and– academic domain
These projects address the entire value constellation from a system perspective
International cooperation is an integral part of WWI in order to prepare future standardisation
Source: WWI