Canopy WiMAX Roadmap
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Transcript Canopy WiMAX Roadmap
Motorola and WiMAX
Motorola Canopy™
Wireless Broadband Products
November 2004
Topics
What is WiMAX?
WiMAX and Motorola
WiMAX vs. Other Wireless Standards
WiMAX Roadmap
The Role of the WiMAX Forum
Range and Speed
Seamless Connectivity Vision
About Canopy™ Wireless Broadband Products
802.16 System Features and Benefits
Additional Information
Summary: Why Motorola?
JCS/Oct 2004
Page 2
What is WiMAX?
WiFi
Reach: A few hundred feet
WiMAX
Reach: Several miles
Plus built-in:
• QoS
• Security
• Access Control
JCS/Oct 2004
Page 3
Wide Area
Other Wireless Standards
2.5-3G Cellular
WiMAX
Local Area
EV-DO, WiBRO
UWB
Bluetooth
Zigbee
Narrowband Data
JCS/Oct 2004
WiFi
Broadband Data
Page 4
WiMAX Roadmap
802.16e Starts
Shipping with Laptops
WiMAX-Certified™
802.16e Products
begin to Appear
Cost-effective Broadband
Wireless IP Products
begin to Appear
Traditional Fixed
Wireless Access
Products
802.16a
Approved
WiMAX-Certified™
802.16d Products
begin to Appear
802.16e
Targeted
Up to 20 Mbps Mobile
802.16d
Approved
Up to 74 Mbps Fixed
802.16
Approved
Up to 20 Mbps Fixed
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
1.9
2.7
3.8
6.2
9.4
14.5
22.6
Subscribers (Millions) Source: Visant Strategies, Inc., 2004
JCS/Oct 2004
Page 5
WiMAX Forum
Certified™
“802.16 Standards
Compliant”
The Role of the WiMAX Forum
JCS/Oct 2004
IEEE 802.16-2004
(802.16d)
IEEE 802.16 TGe
(802.16e)
WiMAX Profiles:
WiMAX Profiles:
TDD: 2.5, 3.5, 5.8 GHz
FDD: 3.5 GHz
256 FFT OFDM
(to be finalized in 2005)
“Licensed spectrum”
128-2048 FFT Scaleable OFDMA
Page 6
Data Rate Table
Modulation & Code Rate
Channel
Bandwidth
QPSK
1/2
QPSK
3/4
16QAM
1/2
16QAM
3/4
64QAM
1/2
64QAM
2/3
64QAM
3/4
1.25 MHz
1.04
1.56
2.08
3.12
3.12
4.16
4.68
1.75 MHz
1.45
2.18
2.91
4.36
4.36
5.82
6.55
3.5 MHz
2.91
4.36
5.82
8.73
8.73
11.64
13.09
5.0 MHz
4.16
6.23
8.32
12.47
12.47
16.62
18.70
7.0 MHz
5.82
8.73
11.64
17.45
17.45
23.27
26.18
10.0 MHz
8.31
12.47
16.62
24.94
24.94
33.25
37.40
20.0 MHz
16.62
24.94
33.25
49.87
49.87
66.49
74.81
Figures in Mbps. Assumes 1/32 Guard Time. Excludes MAC and preamble overhead.
Farthest from
Base Site
Closest to
Base Site
Amount of
Available
Spectrum
JCS/Oct 2004
Page 7
Motorola and WiMAX
JCS/Oct 2004
Page 8
How WiMAX fits Motorola’s Vision
Seamless Connectivity at Work, at Home, in the Auto and out in the World
Backhaul
Residential
Broadband
WiFi Hot Spots,
security cameras and
Micro-Cell Sites
DSL alternative,
residential voice service
Business-class Services
T1 replacement, voice and
data services
JCS/Oct 2004
Mobile
Broadband
Portable, nomadic and
mobility
Page 9
About Motorola’s
Wireless Broadband Products
Canopy Product Line
Markets
Cost-effective Wide-area Wireless Broadband
Voice, Video and Data QoS
20 Mbps at up to 35 Miles
5.8, 5.4, 5.2, 2.4 GHz and 900 MHz bands
Wireless Backhaul, T1 and DSL alternatives
Service Providers and Private Networks
Distributed through Motorola divisions as well
as a network of over 500 Resellers worldwide
Customers
“Hundreds of Thousands” units deployed in
over 80 countries
Include: Sprint, Walt Disney, Notre Dame
University, US Army, Boston Police, NASA,
FedEx, ChinaComm and thousands more…
JCS/Oct 2004
Page 10
Canopy™ Advantage:
Upgrade Path to Unlicensed WiMAX
Canopy Software-Defined Radio (SDR) technology
protects your investment!
Interoperable with existing Canopy systems
Upgrade path:
Advantage Access Points (AP) will communicate with
Goal is for an unlicensed WiMAX AP to communicate with
Existing Canopy Subscriber Modules (SM)
Canopy Advantage SM
Canopy SM
Canopy Advantage SM
Canopy Unlicensed WiMAX SM
Software upgrade from 802.16d to 802.16e
“Leave No SM Behind”
JCS/Oct 2004
Page 11
Customers Providing WiMAX Services Today
JCS/Oct 2004
Page 12
Canopy™ 802.16 System Architecture
Mobility
Manager
Network &
Services
AAA
Server
3rd-Party Email,
Content & other
Application
Servers
3rd-Party
VoIP Gateway
PSTN
Network Element
Manager
Core IP
Network
Bandwidth and
Authentication
Manager (BAM)
CANOPY
CANOPY
Internet
IP
Router
CANOPY
CANOPY
Infrastructure
CANOPY
CANOPY
CANOPY
CANOPY
Motorola Canopy
Access Point (AP) Cluster
CANOPY
Ethernet
Switch
3-5 Km Typical
Cell Radius
Devices
Motorola Canopy
Motorola Canopy
Outdoor Subscriber Indoor Subscriber
Module (SM-O)
Module (SM-I)
JCS/Oct 2004
3rd-Party Embedded
Subscriber Module
(SM-E)
Motorola VT1000
VoIP Terminal
(SM-V)
Motorola WA840
3rd Party
Indoor 802.11 AP Outdoor 802.11 AP
(SM-WI)
(SM-WO)
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Key Motorola Features and Benefits
FEATURE
DESCRIPTION
BENEFIT
FLeX-OFDM™ Modulation
128 to 2048 FFT Scaleable OFDMA
modulation (802.16e), with static
256 FFT OFDM (802.16d) mode
Improved non-line-of-sight performance,
enhanced multi-path performance, better
immunity to Doppler-shift effects in a mobile
environment, full 802.16d compliance with
upgrade path to 802.16e
CANVAS™ Radio Hardware
Platform
Fully-programmable FPGA-based
platform with over-the-air
upgradeability
DSP flexibility and ASIC performance at a
surprisingly lower cost than custom 802.16
ICs
Advanced Antenna System
Multi-element antenna system with
beam-steering
Enhanced indoor coverage for non-line-ofsight, indoor install with zero truck rolls
Fully-integrated Design
Digital, RF and Ethernet Interface
subsystems are fully integrated
within the Antenna hardware and
connected by a single CAT-5 cable
with Power-over-Ethernet (PoE)
Zero-footprint at base station site, low-cost
CAT-5 cables, no RF cable losses, easy to
install, significantly lower failure rates
Low Cost
Technological advances from
today’s Canopy platform will be
carried over to the 802.16 products
Deliver fixed and mobile wireless
broadband services at rates competitive
with incumbent services
JCS/Oct 2004
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Additional Information
JCS/Oct 2004
Page 15
OFDM Basics
OFDM Subcarriers
A Mobile Broadband Channel
1
0.9
0.8
0.7
S(f)
0.6
0.5
0.4
0.3
0.2
0.1
0
-15
-10
-5
0
Subcarrier Number
5
10
15
European Digital Terrestrial TV (DVB-T)
64-QAM Performance
= Pilot symbol
frequency (subcarriers)
= Data s ymbol
More subcarries with
sc attered and
continuous pilots
time (baud intervals )
JCS/Oct 2004
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Why Scalable OFDMA?
Wider Channels
Narrower Channels
256 FFT OFDM
(802.16d/WiMAX)
Scalable OFDMA
(802.16e)
Scaleable OFDMA is better suited for mobility
Static 256 FFT OFDM has less inter-carrier spacing at narrower channel
bandwidths
With less inter-carrier spacing, frequency shifts due to Doppler
(i.e. motion) will cause inter-carrier interference
Is targeted to become part of the 802.16e standard
FLeX-OFDM™ can do both 256 FFT OFDM and Scaleable OFDMA
JCS/Oct 2004
Page 17
4G OFDM Experimental System
6 sector base site
2 antennas/sector
height = ~160 ft
Dual receivers at mobile
BER
First industry 4G field trial (Sept 2001)
Completed mobile 4G field experiment
Transmit and receive several modulation
(OFDM, spread-OFDM, CDMA…) and coding
Demonstrated up to 300 Mbps
Full-duplex OFDM transceivers
Field trials with handheld devices
Channel BER vs. position for high-order QAM
JCS/Oct 2004
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Motorola OFDM Technology Leadership
Mobile broadband PHY+MAC+Cellular technology
5000
30
27
24
2000
21
18
15
-1000
12
Advanced media-access control (MAC)
9
6
-4000
3
0
-7000
-7000
-4000
-1000
2000
log-MAP H
log-MAP D
log-MAP G
log-MAP C
log-MAP F
log-MAP B
log-MAP E
log-MAP A
JCS/Oct 2004
Minimized latency for optimal user experience
5000
Prototype leadership
First to field-test mobile broadband concepts
Deployed multi-antenna testbed in Chicago & Schaumburg
Prototyped realistic multi-antenna portables
Mobile wide-area 40 Mbps OFDM link
4Gx easily reconfigured for IEEE 802.16 modes
Extended multi-antenna technologies to mobile broadband
TxAA => range enhancement, link reliability and coverage reliability
SDMA => capacity multiplication
MIMO => 300 Mbps date rates for wide-area cellular
Verified effectiveness in urban/suburban tests
High performance channel coding
40+ Mbps hardware turbo decoder
Design scales to larger FPGA/ASIC
Page 19
Motorola Standards Leadership
WiMAX Forum
Principal Member
Active participant in all working groups
IEEE 802.16
Active participant since 1998
4th-largest voting block
MINA
Member of an exclusive group of 10
companies working on a mobile networking
architecture for 802.16e networks
JCS/Oct 2004
Page 20
Motorola:
A World Class Solution Provider
Motorola Total Value Proposition
Network
Infrastructure
• CDMA Portfolio
Application
Platform
& Integration
Services
Solutions
• GSM/UMTS Portfolio
• GAMA Services Delivery
Platform
• 2G to 3G migration
• Push To Talk IMS
• Radio Access Multistandard platforms
• Messaging
• Softswitch IMS migration
• LAN Gateway & Services
(Seamless Mobility
• Complete Network Services
Reduced Capex
• Intelligent Optimization
Services (IOS)
• Managed Services
• Security Consultancy
• GPRS / 1X Services
• Advisory Services
Devices
• CDMA Handsets
• GSM Handsets
• Smart Phones
• Converged Devices
• Integrated Wireless
Broadband Products
• Wireless Broadband
Plus…
JCS/Oct 2004
Over 75 Years Wireless Experience
Demonstrated OFDM Expertise
Over 150,000 Wireless Broadband devices
deployed in over 80 countries world wide
The resources of a $30B company
Page 21
Will WiMAX Replace “4G” Cellular?
No, WiMAX is targeted to be deployed in
“non-cellular” spectrum bands such as 2.5,
3.5 and 5.8 GHz
The two technologies may eventually offer
similar services to the consumer, but the
service will likely be provided by separate
entities
JCS/Oct 2004
Page 22
About Motorola’s
Wireless Broadband Products Organization
Canopy Product Line
Wireless Backhaul, T1 and DSL
Service Providers and Private Networks
Distributed through Motorola divisions as well
as Independent VARs
Over 500 Resellers worldwide
Include: Sprint, Verizon, Walt Disney, the
University of Notre Dame, the Chicago Police
Department, NASA, China Unicom and
thousands more
JCS/Oct 2004
150,000+ units shipped
Deployed in over 80 countries
#1 Market Share in Unlicensed,
#2 in all BWA
Financial
63 Motorola patents wrapped
around the product
IEEE 802.16, WiMAX Forum and
MINA members
Sales
Customers
Technology
Markets
Cost-effective Broadband Wireless IP
Voice, Video and Data QoS
20 Mbps at up to 35 Miles
5.8, 5.4, 5.2, 2.4 GHz and 900 MHz bands
available
3x revenue growth in 2003
Profitable
People
80 People (40% engineering)
Page 23
Base Site Example
Cluster of Smart Antennas
With Fully Integrated Electronics
Ethernet Output over
Outdoor CAT-5 Cables
Power-over-Ethernet (PoE)
GPS Synchronization
Wireline or Wireless
Backhaul Options
Hardened IP Switch and Power
Distribution in Outdoor Enclosure
Sample Complete 6-Sector Base Site
JCS/Oct 2004
A/C Power from any Source
Page 24
Canopy Around the World
Commercially Deployed in over 80 Countries
Bosnia Poland
Hungary Russia
Bulgaria Ukraine
Canada
Ireland
Serbia Kazakhstan
China
USA
United Kingdom
Armenia
Georgia
Mongolia
Mexico
Bermuda
Luxemburg
Montenegro
Azerbaijan
Japan
Belize
Bahamas
Macedonia
Turkey
Hong Kong
El Salvador
Jamaica
Albania
Afghanistan
Taiwan
Costa Rica
Dominican Republic
Czech Republic Pakistan
Singapore
Panama
Puerto Rico
Saudi Arabia Israel
Jordan Iraq
Colombia
Brunei
Nepal
Algeria
U.A.E.
Venezuela
Malaysia
Pakistan
Togo Nigeria
Egypt
Guyana
Indonesia
India
Kenya Botswana
Brazil
American Samoa
Sri Lanka
Mali Tanzania
Ecuador
Philippines
Bangladesh
Ghana Seychelles
Uruguay
New Zealand
Cambodia
Ivory Coast Zimbabwe
Chile
Australia
Vietnam
Guinea Mozambique
Argentina
Namibia South Africa
JCS/Oct 2004
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Summary: Why Motorola?
Mobility in mind from the start
A flexible, high-performance platform
FLeX-OFDM™: Scaleable OFDM/A
Software upgrade from 802.16d to 802.16e
FPGA-based design for flexibility and performance
Integrated for higher quality and lower cost
A solid, experienced Partner
75 years of Wireless experience
OFDM technology and mobility leadership
High-volume manufacturing capacity
The resources of a $30B company
JCS/Oct 2004
Page 26
Motorola – Intelligence Everywhere™
JCS/Oct 2004
Page 27