Search results for "Backward compatibility"

showing 6 items of 6 documents

Out-of-Band Signaling Scheme for High Speed Wireless LANs

2007

In recent years, the physical layer data rate provided by 802.11 Wireless LANs has dramatically increased thanks to significant advances in the modulation and coding techniques employed. However, previous studies show that the 802.11 MAC operation, namely the distributed coordination function (DCF), represents a limiting factor: the throughput efficiency drops as the channel bit rate increases, and a throughput upper limit does indeed exist when the channel bit rate goes to infinite high. These findings indicate that the performance of the DCF protocol will not be efficiently improved by merely increasing the channel bit rate. This paper shows that the DCF performance may significantly bene…

Computer scienceComputer network performanceWireless LANThroughputDistributed coordination functionBackward compatibilityIEEE 802.11Packet switchingWireless lanWireless LAN Throughput Bit rate Physical layer Modulation coding Access protocols Content management Signal design Media Access Protocol Performance analysisElectrical and Electronic EngineeringIEEE 802.11Settore ING-INF/03 - Telecomunicazionibusiness.industryApplied MathematicsComputerSystemsOrganization_COMPUTER-COMMUNICATIONNETWORKSPhysical layerCode rateComputer Science ApplicationsComputer network performance; IEEE 802.11; Wireless LANBurst switchingModulationOut-of-band managementbusinessCommunication channelComputer networkIEEE Transactions on Wireless Communications
researchProduct

A new preprocessing and control board for the phase 2 electronics of AGATA experiment

2016

The electronics of AGATA HPGe segmented gamma ray detector faces a new challenge in the search of a bigger integration and cost reduction for the phase 2 of the experiment going beyond 45 crystals. This opportunity can be used to introduce a new architecture based on commercial standards while keeping backward compatibility with current electronics. In this sense, new FPGA devices and fast Ethernet links can be used to ease the preprocessing and control task and allowing for processor farms to distribute the processing load. At the same time, modularity should be a key feature of the design in the aim to make it upgradable in time and technology. This paper presents the design of a new prep…

EthernetEngineering010308 nuclear & particles physicsbusiness.industryBandwidth (signal processing)Fast EthernetChange control board01 natural sciencesBackward compatibilityCost reduction0103 physical sciencesElectronic engineeringElectronicsbusinessField-programmable gate array2016 IEEE-NPSS Real Time Conference (RT)
researchProduct

A hybrid network for maritime on-board communications

2012

Current maritime on-board communications have to be enhanced for safety and security, where ubiquitous technologies can help, together with providing comfort and convenience to the crew and passengers. Employing wireless sensor networks on board is one recent practice of implementing ubiquitous technology for ships, where further study is needed because of the connectivity challenges. Meanwhile, it is important for an on-board communication system to be reliable and flexible for handling emergency situations. In this paper, we propose a solution of employing ubiquitous technology on ships in a way that both connectivity and emergency handling are examined. Two key aspects of this proposal a…

Key distribution in wireless sensor networksUbiquitous computingbusiness.industryComputer scienceHybrid systemThe InternetWired communicationCommunications systembusinessWireless sensor networkBackward compatibilityComputer network2012 IEEE 8th International Conference on Wireless and Mobile Computing, Networking and Communications (WiMob)
researchProduct

A space-division time-division multiple access scheme for high throughput provisioning in WLANs

2005

Directional antennas may dramatically increase the capacity of a Wireless LAN by allowing several stations to simultaneously communicate. Since deployment of directive/smart antennas on the customer's terminals is awkward (for technological, cost, robustness, and convenience reasons) it is of interest to deploy advanced antenna solutions only at the Access Point. When omnidirectional transmissions are used at the Mobile Stations, the asynchronous nature of the 802.11 MAC handshake structurally limits the possibility to exploit spatial reuse. Significant throughput enhancements can be achieved only at the expense of redesigning (part of) the 802.11 MAC protocol: mainly a form of synchronizat…

Mobile radioDirectional antennaComputer sciencebusiness.industryComputerSystemsOrganization_COMPUTER-COMMUNICATIONNETWORKSTime division multiple accessSmart antennaMedium access controlThroughputSpace-division multiple accessInterference (wave propagation)Backward compatibilityAsynchronous communicationWireless landirectional antennaDirective antennasbusinessOmnidirectional antennaComputer network
researchProduct

Towards a relation oriented service architecture

2010

Over the past three decades, the Internet has evolved from a point to point, open, academic network to an applications and services oriented critical infrastructure. The Internet has become a vital component of society today, from its simple origin as an academic research project. During this transition, numerous applications and usages of the network emerged that cannot be efficiently implemented by adhering to the original design tenets of the Internet. Some of the tenets have been broken, others diluted and new ones are emerging to accommodate new paradigms. Moreover, applications and services have been moving slowly but consistently towards a uniform model based on Service Oriented Appr…

Network architecturecomputer.internet_protocolbusiness.industryComputer scienceQuality of serviceInteroperabilityService-oriented architectureComputer securitycomputer.software_genreBackward compatibilityWorld Wide WebNext-generation networkThe InternetSoftware architecturebusinesscomputer2010 Second International Conference on COMmunication Systems and NETworks (COMSNETS 2010)
researchProduct

A Migration Path for the Internet: From Best-Effort to a QoS Capable Infrastructure by Means of Localized Admission Control

2000

Looking back at many proposals appeared on the scene in these years, a fundamental lesson to be learned is that their success or failure is strictly tied to their backward compatibility with existing infrastructures. In this paper, we consider the problem of providing explicit admission control decisions for QoS aware services. We rely the decision to admit a new flow upon the successful and timely delivery, through the Internet, of probe packets independently generated by the end points. Our solution, called GRIP (Gauge&Gate Realistic Internet Protocol), is fully distributed and scalable, as admission control decisions are taken at the edge network nodes, and no coordination between router…

Routerbusiness.industryComputer scienceNetwork packetResource Reservation Protocolcomputer.internet_protocolQuality of serviceInternet layerDistributed computingComputerSystemsOrganization_COMPUTER-COMMUNICATIONNETWORKSAdmission controlBackward compatibilitylaw.inventionlawInternet ProtocolThe InternetbusinesscomputerComputer network
researchProduct