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© Roke Manor Research Limited 2005
Overview
Roke Manor Research FMC Motivations for FMC Progress in Standardisation Terminals Infrastructure Next steps
The future belongs to those who believe in the beauty of their dreams.Eleanor Roosevelt (1884 - 1962)
© Roke Manor Research Limited 2005
Roke Manor Research
RMR is a Siemens UK R&D operating business Siemens is in the top 4 for R&D investment - €5.3bn in 2003 RMR undertakes R&D in fixed and mobile communications,
sensors and information technology Active in standardisation relating to FMC topics within a number
of organisations including ETSI, 3GPP, IEEE and IETF
Experienced in developing standards compliant systems in both fixed and mobile communications
RMR is a contract R&D house that undertakeswork both for Siemens and for a wide range of third party organisations around the world
© Roke Manor Research Limited 2005
Fixed Mobile Convergence
Right now we have two voice/data worlds – Fixed wireline and Mobile wireless
We also have Wi-Fi (and very soon WiMAX and Korea is developing WiBro) which are generally seen as being a kind of wireless fixed solution but often operated by mobile operators (or their partners) But… Wi-Fi is beginning to adopt SIM-based authentication
(eg EAP-SIM) making it look a little more like mobile
FMC aims to provide a single back-end infrastructure supporting all fixed and mobile users, potentially with single sign-on access
The best way to predict the future is to invent it.Alan Kay
© Roke Manor Research Limited 2005
Why FMC?
FMC offers: Tariffing Ubiquity (any network access) Ease of use (single sign-in, common user experience) Enhanced mediated services – often peer to peer and
making use of presence (& possibly also location) info: Multimedia instant messaging (IM) Presence-based games Cooperative content sharing & editing IM for interaction with knowledge “agents”
Prediction is very difficult, especially about the future.Niels Bohr (1885 - 1962)
© Roke Manor Research Limited 2005
User Motivations for FMC
Single device – single contact number Personal rather than shared device
Traditional home phones are family phones No personal address book No personal SMS/MMS messaging history
Traditional mobiles are personal phones Personal address book & SMS history Personalisation – ringtones, wallpaper, customised shortcuts
Consistent user experience across cellular, fixed-line and hot-spot access
Cheaper tariffing at office and home Presence-based applications and services Access to higher data-rates at office and home
© Roke Manor Research Limited 2005
Operator Motivations for FMC
Single back-end infrastructure giving cost and support savings
Value-added services can be seamlessly delivered over a wide range of bearers with flexible tariffing including post-paid contract
All end-user devices strongly authenticated VoIP traffic can be effectively tariffed FMC can hide details of one operator’s
infrastructure from its interconnected neighbours
Where a calculator on the ENIAC is equipped with 18,000 vacuum tubes and weighs 30 tons, computers in the future may have only 1,000 vacuum tubes and perhaps weigh 1.5 tons.Popular Mechanics, March 1949
© Roke Manor Research Limited 2005
Progress in Standardisation
Standards ledETSI, 3GPP,
ITU-T, IEEE,
IETF
Market led Some people in the market-place cannot wait for
standardisation
eg Skype & other new entrants
The future, according to some scientists, will be exactly like the past, only far more expensive.John Sladek
© Roke Manor Research Limited 2005
Fixed Mobile Convergence Alliance (FMCA)
FMC handset technologies favoured by the Fixed Mobile Convergence Alliance (FMCA): Bluetooth CTP (cordless telephony profile) Wi-Fi SIP (VoIP using SIP signalling) Wi-Fi UMA (GSM tunnelled over
Wi-Fi)
Half our life is spent trying to find something to do with the time we have rushed through life trying to save.Will Rogers (1879 - 1935), New York TImes, Apr. 29, 1930
© Roke Manor Research Limited 2005
UMA - Unlicenced Mobile Access
FMC by tunnelling GSM over IP (via Wi-Fi or Bluetooth) UMA (Unlicenced Mobile Access) –
eg BT Bluephone “Fusion”, offering roaming of GSM onto fixed line
UMA is now 3GPP work item "Generic Access to A/Gb interfaces“, and is now part of 3GPP Release 6+ activity
I never think of the future - it comes soon enough.Albert Einstein (1879 - 1955)
© Roke Manor Research Limited 2005
3GPP – IP Multimedia Subsystem
3GPP Rel 5 – IMS for non-real-time services and near real-time services
3GPP Rel 6 – IMS for real-time services
Uses Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) IMS infrastructure provides a set of SIP
application servers, subscriber databases (HSS) and gateways to enable a variety of integrated voice and data services
IMS was developed for mobile rather than fixed… …3GPP has now added new work items for network
independence of IMS – e.g. over Wi-Fi as well as 3G/GPRS
© Roke Manor Research Limited 2005
ETSI TISPAN
“Telecoms & Internet converged Services & Protocols for Advanced Networks“
Fixed line transition from circuit-switched to packet-switched voice services
Fixed network service aspects, architectural aspects, protocol aspects, Quality of Service (QoS) studies, security related studies & mobility aspects within fixed networks
Encompasses ETSI FMC standardisation activity Recent agreement that TISPAN will use relevant 3GPP (IMS)
docs to realise FMC
ETSI TISPAN & 3GPP IMS seen as the “official” route to FMC in Europe
© Roke Manor Research Limited 2005
Some relevant IETF activities
VOIPPEER (for VoIP operator interconnect) Subject of recent meetings to establish new
IETF Working Group Focus on peering arrangements for VoIP
operators to interconnect over the Internet cf GSMA GRX (GPRS Roaming Exchange)
but over the Internet rather than through private links
ENUM to assist call routing and number translation Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) -related activities
From a central role in IMS for large operators… … to enabling DIY interconnect for very small VoIP operators
© Roke Manor Research Limited 2005
EU Framework Programme 6
Wireless World Initiative (WWI) Projects funded by EU under FP6 Focus is on systems beyond 3G Projects cover:
New air interface Network infrastructure, includes work on
convergence between different operator business environments – such as dynamic roaming
Services and applications The FMC world will increasingly require large
numbers of roaming agreements between “operators” of all sizes, including relationships with home or business networks
© Roke Manor Research Limited 2005
Terminals
FMC-type terminals have been slow to appear but there are examples: BT Bluephone “Fusion” service KT One Phone service Siemens M34 Gigaset USB Adapter
allows home DECT phone traffic to be routed via a PC out as VoIP traffic using Skype or SIP
dualphone.net cordless DECT handset basestation connects via USB to a PC running Skype, DECT terminal LCD display indicates online “presence” status of Skype buddies
© Roke Manor Research Limited 2005
FMC client software
IMS FMC clients have been slow to appear At present, FMC-like client software typically:
Mainly Open Mobile Alliance (OMA) Wireless Village clients on phones
Mainly AIM(also Yahoo, MSN Messenger, Jabber etc) or Skype on PDAs and PCs
Siemens OpenScape client on PCs
+ some use of SIP-based VoIP eg sipgate, esp. in Europe but firewall issues have slowed uptake
© Roke Manor Research Limited 2005
Infrastructure
IMS infrastructure now being offered to Mobile and Fixed Network Operators
Siemens IMS already being adopted in both fixed and mobile worlds
SIP-based IMS infrastructure makes it easy to develop enhanced services running on SIP application servers
It would appear that we have reached the limits of what it is possible to achieve with computer technology, although one should be careful with such statements, as they tend to sound pretty silly in 5 years. John Von Neumann (ca. 1949)
© Roke Manor Research Limited 2005
The future
Terminals are becoming ever more sophisticated User interfaces for small form-factor devices are becoming
more effective Increasingly people expect to be able
to access more than just voice from their phone
Increasingly people expect to be able to access more than just data from their PC or PDA
The technical barriers to FMC have been pretty much resolved, it is now up to the operators and consumers…
Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.Arthur C. Clarke (1917 - ), "Profiles of The Future", 1961 (Clarke's third law)
© Roke Manor Research Limited 2005
LifeWorks – the vision from Siemens
Siemens Communications with its expertise in mobile and fixed networks, enterprise networks and devices is uniquely positioned to deliver this vision
LifeWorks
AccessFixed networks Mobile networks Enterprise networks
Unified user experience
Home On the go Hotspot Office
© Roke Manor Research Limited 2005
LifeWorks – the future of communication
FMC is part of the LifeWorks vision from Siemens Easy and efficient communication and universal
access to services To turn the vision into reality Siemens has started the
LifeWorks@Com program with the following projects: FMC Enterprise Mobility Smart home IMS based mobility solutions WLAN solutions Location based solutions Mobile broadcast