2 resultados para Interpretazione telefonica
em Consorci de Serveis Universitaris de Catalunya (CSUC), Spain
Resumo:
Aquest projecte tracta de l’estudi de la cobertura WiMAX basada en la variant 802.16-2004 en la que opera a 3.5 GHz en diferents escenaris d’un campus universitari. Primerament es realitza una introducció general a WiMAX i es defineixen els equips utilitzats. Posteriorment es comença a dur a terme un estudi de la cobertura WiMAX en diferents escenaris: indoor y outdoor per tal de poder extreure models empírics simplificats de path loss a partir de mesures realitzades amb els terminals WiMAX. Per últim, s’introdueix al projecte InterRural del Ministeri d'Indústria, Turisme i Comerç dut a terme durant els mesos Octubre 2007 - Març 2008 amb altres empreses col·laboradores: Telefònica, Hispasat, Gigle i Iber-X. La finalitat del projecte InterRural és comparar diferents tecnologies wireless de banda ample com alternatives per un bucle local ràdio de la última milla. En concret es comparen experimentalment les tecnologies WiMAX i WiFI 802.11a en diferents escenaris: LOS i NLOS.
Resumo:
ADSL is becoming the standard form of residential and small-business broadband Internet access due to, primarily, its low deployment cost. These ADSL residential lines are often deployed with 802.11 Access Points (AP) that providewireless connectivity. Given the density of ADSL deployment, it is often possible for a residential wireless client to be in range of several other APs, belonging to neighbors, with ADSL connectivity. While the ADSL technology has showed evident limits in terms of capacity (with speeds ranging 1-10 Mbps), the short-range wireless communication can guarantee a muchhigher capacity (up to 20 Mbps). Furthermore, the ADSL links in the neighborhood are generally under-utilized, since ADSL subscribers do not connect 100% of the time. Therefore, it is possible for a wireless client to simultaneously connect to several APs in range and effectively aggregate their available ADSL bandwidth.In this paper, we introduce ClubADSL, a wireless client that can simultaneously connect to several APs in range on different frequencies and aggregate both their downlink and uplink capacity. ClubADSL is a software that runs locally on the client-side, and it requires neither modification to the existing Internet infrastructure, nor any hardware/protocol upgradesto the 802.11 local area network. We show the feasibility of ClubADSL in seamlessly transmitting TCP traffic, and validate its implementation both in controlled scenarios and with current applications over real ADSL lines. In particular we show that a ClubADSL client can greatly benefit from the aggregated download bandwidth in the case of server-client applications such as video streaming, but can also take advantage of the increased upload bandwidth greatly reducing download times with incentive-based P2P applications such as BitTorrent.