Monday, March 3, 2008

Mobile Computing

Mobile Computing Market- The Big Picture -

Mobile computing and wireless networking market is ready to take off - some research firms expect it to become a 70 billion dollar market in the new millennium (year 2005-2006) if you include wireless data services, mobile devices, application software, systems integration and related services. A study by CIBC World Markets done in 2000 estimate wireless data market itself to explode to 24.5 billion market by 2004. While this forecast may not been fully met, we think it might reach very close to that number.

The biggest challenge that we face in sizing the market is to define what is included and what is not included by a particular analyst in his/her study. The biggest skew is inserted by wireless handsets. If you include second and third generation handsets, the market becomes huge. During 2000, the number of handsets sold world-wide was 440 million units worldwide. At $200 unit price, this represents $88 billion. Since then, annual cellular handset sale numbers have hovered around 450 million mark. If you add to that, wireless network infrastructure market (base stations, etc.), it may be another $40-50 billion. We suggest to market planners and forecasters that they should not include cellular handsets in mobile computing market sizing because primary use of these handsets is for voice, and not wireless data. Of course, in future, increasing percentage of advanced handsets will be utilized for wireless data applications. Yet, this percentage will not reach 10% for the next several years - we mean where wireless Internet is a major application and nut a casual application.

More recent studies have forecast the market to be as high as twice of the estimate in the first paragraph. MobileInfo.Com is somewhat cautious in its own estimates. We believe that methodology used in some of these surveys and estimates is faulty. The forecasters assume elastic supply of capital to invest in new technology without any competition from other sectors. They also do not apply statistical validation tests against economic data. We suggest a more conservative outlook and propose that market planners should use caution. By any standards you use, market for mobile computing and wireless is large

Technoworld

TECHNOLOGY

Broadcom to Give Wireless Networks ZipSource: Matthew Broersma, ZDNet (UK)
Broadcom has introduced a Wi-Fi chipset that it says can speed the performance of 802.11g networks to 125mbps, potentially creating new opportunities for routing high-bandwidth media across wireless networks.
The company's 54g MaxPerformance chipset, with AfterBurner technology, is designed to be compatible with existing 802.11g networks, with an added "performance" mode that offers the equivalent to a signal rate of 125mbps, Broadcom said Thursday at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas. That is faster than other wireless-LAN acceleration technologies, such as Atheros' 108mbps Super G. "Broadcom's latest offering provides both 802.11g compliance and a performance mode that can significantly increase throughput in an 802.11g-capable network," said Broadcom Senior Director Jeff Abramowitz in a statement.
The first product using AfterBurner, Buffalo Technology's AirStation 125mbps Wireless Cable/DSL Router-g (WHR2-G54), also made its debut Thursday. The four-port broadband router combines WLAN acceleration with a system called AirStation One-Touch Secure System (AOSS), designed to simplify wireless security configuration.
Broadcom said that the performance gain in AfterBurner is due to the closing down of the timing between data packets. The chipset uses one 802.11g channel for transmission, unlike Super G, which multiplexes traffic over two channels--an approach that Broadcom claims causes interference with other devices using the 2.4GHz radio band, including Wi-Fi and Bluetooth devices.
"Unlike competing high-speed solutions, the WHR2-G54 does not cause harm to nearby 2.4GHz wireless systems," said Buffalo in a statement.
Broadcom's chipset is currently being demonstrated at CES. The WHR2-G54 will be on the market in the United States next month for $199 (£108). Broadcom supplies WLAN chips to networking equipment makers such as Belkin, Linksys, Microsoft and Motorola; and its chips are used in notebook PCs from Apple Computer, Dell, eMachines, Fujitsu, Gateway and Hewlett-Packard.
Broadcom has shipped more than 11 million of its 54g chipsets, and it controls 78 percent of the U.S. retail market for 802.11g products, according to figures from the NPD Group released Thursday. Multimedia networksAfterBurner underscores a recent trend among chipmakers to create ever-faster networks for transmitting larger forms of digital media. The goal is to create wireless networks that can support forms of digital media that require greater bandwidth, such as video.
For example, on Tuesday NetGear announced the Super G-based WGT634U Super Wireless Media Router, which connects to an external hard drive over a USB 2.0 connection and allows client devices on the router's Wi-Fi network to access the drive's contents.
Earlier this week, chipmaker GlobespanVirata announced the Prism Nitro XM Xtreme Multimedia, an upgrade for its 802.11g, 802.11a and combination 802.11g/802.11a chips that boosts wireless transfer rates for compressed data to up to 140mbps, though actual throughput rates will be about 70mbps. Globespan Virata's system only speeds up the transfer of compressed data, such as audio and video, while content, such as encrypted data, is transferred at lower speeds.
The wireless-networking industry has been working on networks with higher throughputs, and industry groups such as the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers are getting the ball rolling on the next Wi-Fi standard, 802.11n, which is expected to offer an actual transfer rate of more than 100mbps. That standard is not expected to be finished for several years.

Management of Wireless Lan

Wireless LANs

Wireless LAN Management

Since the proliferation of wireless LANs during 2001-2002 inside and outside the corporate setting, management of wireless LANs has assumed great importance. The following functions need to be addressed:
Management of various multiple access points (AP's) in a campus environment , providing roaming and session maintenance services as users move from one AP to another
Tracking users, groups of users, their security and user authentication - this can be done either exclusively for wireless LANs or an extension of wireline LANs or as an extension of entire remote network configuration (enterprise network perspective)
Providing common user interface for hot spot environments
Asset management - type of device, device information - model, CPU, peripherals, configuration settings, application inventory, etc.
Software updates and data synchronization

Class of service and bandwidth allocation to different users

Issues To Consider

Types of devices supported - Does it support only laptops?

Single user interface?

Hot spot support?

Does it support multiple access points - 802.11b, 802.11a, Bluetooth and others?

Only wireless LAN or WLAN and wireless WAN?

Campus only or multiple campus across a wide area network

Does it need a proprietary hardware

Likelihood of future compatibility to IEEE 802.11x standard, especially 802.11i standard

One piece of software for security and another for asset management or an integrated software - kind of management suite

BlueSocket - more than security, class of service

iPassConect Version 2.3 - Single user interface for various environment - inside and outside corporate environment. Currently supports laptops, will support handheld PDAs (Microsoft Pocket PCs in 2003).
Mobile Automation's MA 2000 Suite Security Module

Proxim in cooperation with Ericsson - new initiative launched to address roaming between wireless LANs and wireless WANs (hot spot roaming)

Reefeege

Symbol's Mobius Centralized WLAN Security Management Architecture

ALSO see Wireless Security page - there is a lot of commonality and overlap between security products and management products