The case for Femto-optimised handsets

January 23, 2010 by admin  
Filed under Uncategorized

FemtoMobile The case for Femto optimised handsets Dean from Disruptive wireless has come out with a report arguing for the need of Femto-aware handsets. The following is an extract from the report summary:

Already, femto are talking up massmarket business models that go beyond simple and macro-network offload. They are talking about 10’s of millions of subscribers, and new “in-home” services for users, that exploit fast and cheap local mobile connectivity.

But this is based on the notion that people will use their differently when in range of femtos. There will be different applications and behaviour when people are at home – perhaps content backups, podcasts or even advertiser-sponsored . The mobile phone may need to linked to TV, PC, HiFi or other items of .

This report argues that if the phone will be used differently, it needs to be designed differently as well. Standard phones can work with , but they are not optimised. The phone needs to be “aware” of the femtocell, ideally both in the radio and the .

The report looks at all the various “layers” of a typical phone, and examines how the advent of will drive changes and optimisations:

  • Physical design & form-factor of the handset
  • Radio layer & protocol stack
  • – memory, power management etc
  • Handset operating system & connection manager
  • New femtocell-related applications & capabilities

The study includes forecasts for the overall femtocell market, and scenarios examining how the evolution of femto-cell aware may evolve. It examines the of the phone design & manufacturing industry, and discusses the role of , OS specialists and .

More Info here.

The following is from an article in Tech World:

The devices could do useful jobs such as handling large media files on phones, but these applications won’t work well unless the phone has a reliable way of knowing whether it is on the femto or the “macro” network, said Dean of Disruptive Analysis. Unfortunately, vendors’ efforts to make work seamlessly with all existing phones has resulted in a definition which makes the femto look exactly like a macrocell, to the handset.

“If femtos change user behavior you will need to change the ,” said of Disruptive Analysis, who warns in a report that femto-aware will be required.

Femto-aware will be important after 2010, said Vedat Eyuboglu, chief technology officer at femto maker Airvana, which supplies silicon modules to Thomson, a maker of home gateways including BT’s Home Hub.

However, warned that the actual phones might get forgotten, or take too long to develop: “The debate around femto-aware phones may get mired in discussions about interference management and 3GPP R8 tweaks to the interfaces involved,” he said. “It takes two years to alter protocol stacks and hardware – we won’t have femto-optimized phones until at least the end of 2010.”

The handset issue could be addressed by industry body the Femto Forum, said Forum chair Simon Saunders, announcing the Forum’s new relationship with the Next Generation Mobile Network Alliance (), a body helping specify requirements for WiMax and LTE systems.

“As well as phones, will be used by devices including dongles and ultra-mobile PCs,” said Saunders. “They do not have such long development cycles as mobile phones.”

The is developing recommendations for a cost-optimized indoor node, and for self-organizing networks, both of which can be met by femtocell designs that the Femto Forum will help develop. The two bodies will promote joint solutions and submit them to standards bodies.

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