HomeRF General Overview

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Transcript HomeRF General Overview

Property of the HomeRF Working Group
General Overview
(with narration removed due to file size)
This presentation is provided by Wayne Caswell, past
Communications Chairman of the HomeRF Working Group.
Direct questions to: [email protected], 512-335-6073.
Property of the HomeRF Working Group
Overview Topics
• What is HomeRF
• Our View of Home Networking
• Wireless Tradeoffs and Positioning
• Highlights and Challenges
• Future Plans
Property of the HomeRF Working Group
What is HomeRF?
Description:
HomeRF blends several technologies to extend beyond
office WLAN solutions, making it the preferred wireless
technology for homes and small offices with no network
administrator.
The open HomeRF specification is designed and optimized
for consumer households, is ideal for broadband, and
enables digital convergence with support for voice, music,
TV, gaming, and data applications.
HomeRF is important because telephone and entertainment
devices can benefit from networks just as much as PCs.
Property of the HomeRF Working Group
is Simple (Fast and Cheap to Install)
Wireless offers Convenience and sometimes is the
only way to network.
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No holes to drill or cables to pull
Supplied S/W simplifies setup
Put the Cable Modem or Set-Top Box by
a TV and install HomeRF on PCs
Potentially eliminates Truck Roll
Property of the HomeRF Working Group
Blends Several Technologies
Existing Upper Layers
UDP
TCP
DECT
IP
HomeRF MAC Layer
CSMA/CA
Priority
CSMA
TDMA
HomeRF PHY Layer
“Ethernet”
Data Path
Streaming
Media Path
Toll-Quality
Voice Path
Network Layer View
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Extends beyond Wireless Ethernet
HomeRF is a New Category
S e c u rity
W i-F i’s b ig g e st p ro b le m
8 0 2 .1 1 i
p ro d u cts in 2 0 0 3
In te rfe re n c e
8 0 2 .1 1 g
& S c a la b ility
p ro d u cts in 2 0 0 3
so m e issu e s re m a in
C o rd le ss p h o n e s ca n sh u t
Q u a lity-o f-se rvice a n d
In te rfe re n ce Im m u n ity ke y
to M u ltim e d ia
V o ic e
8 to ll q u a lity C o rd le ss
P h o n e co n n e ctio n s
H o m e R F 2 .0
NOW
S ca la b ility is 5 tim e s b e tte r
d o w n W i-F i
E n te rta in m e n t
H o m e R F 2 .0
NOW
8 0 2 .1 1 e
p ro d u cts in 2 0 0 3
A ll m u st h a ve Q o S
8 0 2 .e
V o IP = e xp e n sive
H o m e R F 2 .0
NOW
H o m e R F 2 .0
NOW
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Broadens the reach of DECT
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Digital Enhanced Cordless Telephone (DECT) is
the world’s most successful cordless standard.
– Cordless Phone market is 10x WLAN
– > 50M radios in 2000 alone
– > 200M DECT handsets in the field by 2003
– > 100 certified DECT suppliers, plus proprietary 2.4 GHz
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– 5th generation silicon with complete chipsets << $10
1.9 GHz DECT requires license outside of Europe
– By using 2.4 GHz, HomeRF moves DECT to
worldwide markets as “Global DECT”
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Is Global DECT … PLUS
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High-speed Data Networking
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WLAN at Ethernet speeds
Avoids security problems of Wi-Fi
Excellent immunity to 2.4 GHz interference
Scales better than Wi-Fi (apartments, office parks)
Entertainment Networking
– Key Broadband apps – Internet Radio, TV and Gaming
– Multimedia needs QoS and Interference Immunity
Enables New Convergence Apps and Devices
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PC enhances the phones
– Phones enhance the PC
Email notification on Phone
– Caller ID on TV
Unified Messaging
– Video Phone
Voice access to PC & Internet apps
Adds Value and Improves Margins
Property of the HomeRF Working Group
Overview Topics
• What is HomeRF
• Our View of Home Networking
• Wireless Tradeoffs and Positioning
• Highlights and Challenges
• Future Plans
Property of the HomeRF Working Group
Sees Home Networking as
MORE than a Wireless LAN
• Cordless Phones
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– 10x larger market than Wireless LAN
Entertainment
– Internet Audio & Video are key broadband apps
Shared Resources & Internet Access
– Multi-PC and/or Broadband Households
9M subscribers in 2001, growing to 40M in 2005
Trend: Integrated Service Bundles
Cordless Convergence without high prices
– Combine Router, LAN access point, Voice base station, etc.
– Both Phones and PC NICs under $100
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Sees Home Networking as
Data Opportunity:
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9M US households with Broadband in 2001
– Going to 40M broadband households in 2005
– 80% have access and 14% plan to upgrade w/i 12 months
~ 25% of Households will be networked by 2004
– 43% of broadband homes have >1 PC
– 67% of BB multi-PC homes already have a home network
Most networked homes use Ethernet
– But 70% planning a home network prefer wireless
> $4B in home N/W equip. by 2005 (NICs, routers)
– > $5 Billion in gateways, >10B in info.appliances by 2005
– > $10 Billion/year in Internet access services today
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Sees Home Networking as
Telephone Opportunity:
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>95% of US homes have Telephone service
– Voice is Key Application in Broadband Bundles
– More revenue from Phone Features than from Internet Access
Data Revenues are Rising but Voice Dominates
– VoTDM (Voice over Time Division Multiplexing) is falling
– VoIP (and Multi-line) is increasing
Cordless phone market is ~10* wireless LAN
– 43M US cordless phones shipped in 2000 + 28M DECT
phones in Europe
– ~50% of households buy a new cordless phone each year
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Sees Home Networking as
Entertainment Opportunity:
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Internet Radio and Streaming Digital Music
Wireless Speakers and Headphones
Multi-player Gaming with Voice
Video-on-demand, TV-based e-commerce, Voiceenhanced TV apps
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Sees Home Networking as
Convergence Opportunity:
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HomeRF is Ideal for Broadband
– Enables integration of Voice, Data, and Entertainment
– Enables new Apps, Devices, Services, and Margins
Broadband growth slowing
– Need less cost, more value, simplicity to cross Chasm
– Connect PCs, TV, stereos, phones, etc. without Truck Roll
Competition for Packaged Services
– Consumers and service providers both benefit
– 65% of PC households are comfortable with service bundles
– Telcos need TV to complete the bundle, MSOs need Voice
(a matter of survival)
Property of the HomeRF Working Group
Overview Topics
• What is HomeRF
• Our View of Home Networking
• Wireless Tradeoffs and Positioning
• Highlights and Challenges
• Future Plans
Property of the HomeRF Working Group
Optimizes Tradeoffs for Households
No optimal solution for all applications.
Each must be optimized individually.
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Interference Immunity
Power Consumption
Infrastructure
Complexity
Bandwidth
Licensing
Size
Cost
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Absorption
Reflection
Latency
Security
Range
Jitter
QoS
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Market Positioning
TDMA, CDMA,
GSM, 3G
Personal
Connectivity
Home
Network
• Entertainment,
• Low Power
Voice, Data
(short distance)
• Cable Replacement • No N/W Admin.
Simple, Secure,
• Ad-hoc Connection
Reliable, Affordable
• MDU / MTU
PAN
LAN
Office
Network
Wide Area
Network
• Wireless Ethernet • Mobile Phone
(data only)
• PDA
• Campus Roaming • Roaming
• Network Admin.
• Little Interference
LAN
WAN
Property of the HomeRF Working Group
Overview Topics
• What is HomeRF
• Our View of Home Networking
• Wireless Tradeoffs and Positioning
• Highlights and Challenges
• Future Plans
Property of the HomeRF Working Group
Highlights of 2001
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Reorganized as non-profit organization in January
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Ratified HomeRF 2.0 in March
First public HomeRF 2.0 demo in May
First Voice call in June
Voice/data Press Tour in August
Shipped HomeRF 2.0 (data) Products in September
(on schedule!)
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Created HomeRF European WG in July
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CES 2002 starts the year off strong
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Already working on HomeRF 2.5 and 3.0
– European certification made possible in December
– New voice & entertainment products, new members, etc.
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Opportunities to Leverage
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HomeRF 2.0 products are shipping
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WECA is sending mixed messages
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HomeRF Differentiation is becoming Clear
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HomeRF Europe WG
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Service Provider Deployments are Near
– Don’t believe WECA hype. HomeRF is Alive and Kicking.
– Operational expenses have been pre-paid by Promoters
– Membership dues fund marketing activities for all
– 802.11a, .11e, and .11g are confusing consumers
– Voice, QoS, interference immunity and security
– VDG, phone, entertainment products shipping
– DECT Forum
Property of the HomeRF Working Group
Overview Topics
• What is HomeRF
• Our View of Home Networking
• Wireless Tradeoffs and Positioning
• Highlights and Challenges
• Future Plans
Property of the HomeRF Working Group
Technology Roadmap
BRIDGE
Add Voice,
Audio, VoD
Data
• PC Networking
• Gateways
• WebPad
Improve
Voice, Video
Embrace
802.11a
• Video Tablets
• Set Top Boxes
• DVD, Satellite
• HDTV
• Cordless Phones
• A/V Products
Internet
2000
1.6 Mbps
HomeRF 1.0
2001
10 Mbps
HomeRF 2.0
2.4 GHz 2002
5 GHz
20+ Mbps
54+ Mbps
(projection)
(projection)
HomeRF 2.x
HomeRF 3.0
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Future Plans for 2.4 GHz
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Enhance Voice
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Extend Coverage
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Faster Data Rates and Throughput
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Adaptive FH (pending FCC approval)
– More lines, higher MOS quality
– Repeater function, Voice Roaming
– Today’s 10 Mbps is good for Internet, MP3 audio, MPEG4
– Tomorrow’s 20+ Mbps supports more users, DVD video
(All the performance that most homes need)
– Avoids static interference to ensure peak performance
Primary Audiences:
– Broadband Carriers
– DECT Community
Property of the HomeRF Working Group
Pros & Cons of using 2.4 GHz
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Advantages
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Worldwide, License-free Spectrum Allocation
Voice and Data can exist on the Same Network
Low Cost solutions Already Shipping
Chipset integration already in development
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Disadvantages
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Dual-band Approach
– Increasingly Crowded spectrum
– Limited performance with backwards compatibility
– Fastest path to high speed home networking
– Embraces corporate 802.11a users; moves HomeRF into
mainstream
– New multi-mode / multi-band products will automatically sense
and adapt to the network
– Consumers don’t care about underlying technology
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Future Plans for 5 GHz
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Embrace 5 GHz and IEEE 802.11a for high-end
– Full compliance with 802.11a at 54 Mbps
– Rich OFDM modulation in less-crowded 5GHz band
– Well suited for Video (DVD, SDTV & HDTV)
– Can extend to 100+ Mbps data performance
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– Possible QoS and Security Enhancements
(HomeRF QoS, Proprietary QoS, or 802.11e)
Complement 2.4 GHz HomeRF technology
– “Global DECT” voice support
– 20+ Mbps for Internet, Music, MPEG4, Gaming, modest Data
– Optional Bridging
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Synergy with PANs
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Bluetooth
– Positioned for Mobile Phones, PDAs, PC Peripherals …
– Compliments both HomeRF and 802.11a
802.15.3
– Fast PAN for Entertainment Center (Hundreds of Mbps)
– Technology not yet selected, could be Ultra-wideband
– Compliments both HomeRF and 802.11a
802.15.4 (Zigbee)
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Lowest Cost (targets <$2 radios)
Longest Battery Life (months or years)
Slow Performance (e.g. 56-256 Kbps)
Positioned for Control Applications
Compliments both HomeRF and 802.11a
Property of the HomeRF Working Group
Conclusion
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HomeRF Embraces and Extends Standards
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Expands Global reach of DECT (2.4 GHz)
Extends performance and function of 802.11FH (2.4 GHz)
Compliments 802.11a by adding 2.4 GHz Voice & Data
Compliments PANs such as Bluetooth, 802.15.3, 802.15.4
Compliments HomePlug, HomePNA, and Wired Ethernet
HomeRF future is both 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz
HomeRF enables Convergence, adds Value