DoD Dreams of Efficient Spectrum Usage 135
Unstrung writes "US Military research agency DARPA is sick of all those static-filled cellphone calls and dropped connections too. The shadowy eggheads are working on a way of using the bandwidth available today more efficiently."
this just in... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:this just in... (Score:1)
Doubt it. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Doubt it. (Score:1)
Re:Doubt it. (Score:1)
Efficiency of systems, however, is something they excel at. For example, if a fighter jet is very inefficient, it's a dog, because it's either super-short range, or flies like a cow because it's carrying so much fuel. They package he food efficiently for foot soldiers so they can go farther, faster, with more ordnance.
More efficient use of spectrum means more data. Don't confuse efficiency with penury.
Re:Doubt it. (Score:5, Insightful)
The efficiency isn't about money, it's about efficiently destroying the enemy, weighed against the expense of our own soldier's lives.
Re:Doubt it. (Score:2)
Re:Doubt it. (Score:1)
DoD spent money and manhours = embarassingly inefficient
DoD products = highly redundant, bullet-proof, and fairly efficient
generally speaking, of course.
Re:Doubt it. (Score:2)
If more efficient spectrum use is really the goal then all they have to do is go visit their friends in the Department of Commerce who are trying to force the FCC to restrict 802.11a to indoor use only. I think it's safe to assume that the current administration is decidedly anti-wireless for some mysterious reason probably related to --cough-- national security. That's probably why Taiwan already has such restrictions. It certainly wouldn't have anything to do with protecting monopoly telecom interests.
Re: Doubt it (Score:1)
Sigs were good when email addrs had !
Re: Doubt it (Score:2)
DARPA != DoD (Score:2)
Efficient spectrum usage is probably more useful for civilian use, though - imagine thousands of people trying to meet up with friends at a football match. Typically, cell phones don't work at all well in such huge densities - efficient spectrum would help in this scenario.
Cellphones vs Efficiency (Score:1)
Adaptive spectrum use is exactly what hams and other trained radio operators do manually -- and most radio users are prohibited from doing by single-channel licensing. (FRS, GMRS, MURS, CB have a lesser but significant ability to change frequency -- hams uniquely have multi-band and multi-channel, often in the same radio.)
Re:Does this mean I"ll be able to d/l hi-res pr0n. (Score:1, Redundant)
DOD, DARPA and Inovation (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:DOD, DARPA and Inovation (Score:2, Informative)
I wonder if that's what'll happen with cell phones: people running their own Cell providers, just like TCP/IP services today.
Pi
Re:DOD, DARPA and Inovation (Score:4, Funny)
RISC technology was pushed forward by DARPA. One effort eventually led to MIPS. Another effort led to the development of the RISC I and RISC II. This technology was licenced to Sun Microsystems, and eventually evolved into a more scalable architecture. I believe that this had some modest commercial success.
Warp and the Connection Machine were the result of DARPA funded efforts to push forward and test the capabilites of massively parallel computers. These were technnological wonders, but did not achieve commercial success. At least, one of these was featured in a very successful motion picture. Furthermore, thanks to MIPS, probably the geekiest line in motion picture history was spoken, "This is a UNIX system. I know this."
I would also have to speculate that a there are numerous computer industry leaders that had RA's in grad school via DARPA funding.
Re:DOD, DARPA and Inovation (Score:1)
Daniel
Re:DOD, DARPA and Inovation (Score:1)
Well. (Score:3, Insightful)
This is nothing very expectional.
People in research always get some grants and think that they'll get some results in some time.
But often they get only one result: Is doesn't work. Or it does the same as the old stuff but more expensive.
If often wonder if anyone has tried to get a grant for "the development of a disc-shaped flying object" yet.
Re:Well. (Score:1)
... and a patent ... (Score:1)
If they do, they'll probably apply for a patent, and the US patent office will approve it. Then they'll charge manufacturers of frisbees with patent infringement. A call will go out for people who have knowledge of any prior art, but few people will respond, only a few geeks and we know how reliable they are. The frisbee manufacturers will attempt to show that they manufacturer their products before 2002, but the patent office and courts will have machines whose software treats all 2-digit dates as having an initial "20". As a result, the courts will conclude that frisbees won't be manufactured for another 60 years or so, and the manufacturers will be ordered to pay royalties.
Hey, maybe I can turn it into a short story and get it published
GSM (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:GSM (Score:1)
The only advantage of GSM over analog is that is (supposedly) harder to listen in on conversations. Although that doesnt stop those who really want to do so (criminal or otherwise).
Re:GSM (Score:1)
Re:GSM (Score:2, Troll)
Re:GSM (Score:2, Offtopic)
The almost trollish nature of your comment begs the question, What are the rights of non-citizens in other (non-US) countries? In the US, the constitution guaraneets certain rights for US citizens. The same rights do not necessarily apply to "outsiders".
Re:GSM (Score:1)
I fear that now, if i buy a boxcutter (or worse, use SSH, encryption is for terrorist, u know)while visiting the US, i'll be jailed for life with no trial. That's why you have to be nuts to visit the US as a non-citizen.
Re:GSM (Score:3, Interesting)
You say that "90% of americans don't have passports". Let's check the data--I couldn't find anywhere a specific mention of how many passports in total are issued at any one time. however I could find press releases such as this one:
http://secretary.state.gov/www/briefings/statem
Which state that:
-In 1997 a record number of 6 million passports were issued
-each year 40 million americas go abroad
-in 1996 5.7 million passports were issued
-each year since 1992 has seen more passports issued in 1992, in which 3.5 million passports were issed.
So, we can assume that 40 million passports is the absolute floor number of possible passports. Also take note that many people who travel to other countries (Canada for instance, one of our two langbased neighbors in the US. Actually I just checked, and a border crossing into Mexico doesn't require a passport either) don't always have passports--I got into canada with a driver's license. So all those "international" travellers (of which there are a large number! don't always get passports).
Also let's assume that since not everyone who has a passport goes broad every-year (and thus won't be represented in above 40M) that there are 30M who have passports sitting in a box at home. So we have a conservative number of 70M people with passports (I'm guessing the 30M is an under-representation).
Also, on the web I read that around 16M people from the US visit Mexico every year. I couldn't find a number for Canada, but I'd bet it's similar. So right there we have 40M going abroad, and 30M going to other North American countries. That number alone is practically the population of Germany!! But anyway, disregarding Canada+Mexico (and also Alaska,Hawaii, smaller US islands etc, options most European nations don't have) somewhere around 1/4 of the population (population is around 270M) has a passport by my estimation, and enough people to roughly equal the population of Germany visit another country. And you're complaining about this why??
This is just fud, fud, fud, us bashing.
Re:GSM (Score:1, Troll)
so, with the numbers highly skewed in your favor, you're right: 80%, not 90%, of americans lack passports. so, 80% of americans can't easily go to countries with gsm - no great loss. and since non-us citizens can be brought before a military tribunal, it's probably not a good idea to go on holiday in the usa if you're not a citizen, so there's no need to be bummed about the lack of a gsm network.
Re:GSM (Score:2)
Population is 278M.
And as for a military tribunal, unless you're a terrorist, plotting death and destruction you have nothing to worry about.
Re:GSM (Score:1)
What makes you think you have to come here to be brought before a US military tribunal? None of the guys sitting in cuba were in the US when they were captured. AFAIK everyone arrested inside the US in going through the regular justice system (Moussaoui, shoe bomber, who else?).
Re:GSM (Score:1)
Re:GSM (Score:3, Insightful)
I don't see many countries converting GSM to CDMA... maybe some of the 3G protocols are CDMA, but that's adding to the GSM networks already in place, certainly not replacing them anytime soon.
And I don't think the existing US cellular infrastructure is really on a par with what's planned for 3G. A lot of changes will be needed, whatever the current tech.
There's quite a difference between GSM and MS: GSM does what it's supposed to, and works pretty damn well. You tried taking a CDMA phone to a different country lately?
Sure, there are advantages with CDMA. Better range, for example, though that's less important for more densely-populated parts of the world (and analogue probably still has the edge). But GSM has advantages too - well-established packet data, SIMs, global roaming...
If CDMA has won, how come GSM is expanding so much in the US?
Re:GSM (Score:3, Informative)
CDMA proved itself technologically superior to TDMA. It allows more users in the same piece of space/bandwidth than TDMA does.
"Better Range" is not an advantage of CDMA. The advantage is better spectral efficiency. I think it may also be more resistant to multipath, but I am not sure. Certainly WCDMA will be.
Market forces and regulation, of course, distort how this affects what people actually have. Compatibility is in fact very important, which is why GSM provides, today, superior service in *that* particular regard. I am not sure why GSM is expanding so fast in the US, but I would bet it is to take advantage of the vast variety of GSM phones due to its superior compatibility. Also, due to the spectacular collapse of share values in telecom companies (partly caused by their grossly overbidding for bandwidth sold by greedy governments), the next generation (3 G wireless) has been delayed... perhaps for a long time.
Today, the US has in inferior system due to its lack of compatibility and resultant duplication of resources. You might say that US users are suffering from the regulatory decision that allowed mankind to realize the benefits of CDMA in the future!
The multiple standards had nothing to do with the us "protecting its native manufacturers." You may have noticed that if that was the goal, it failed! The multiple standardsd were due to a regulatory philosophy of reducing the standardization ordered by the government. The FCC decided to regulate based on spectral efficiency, rather than specific technical specifications. Both TDMA and CDMA met the initial requiremens, and the US thus has two kinds of TDMA (GSM and US) and CDMA. The choice was made completely by the providers. A provider could choose whatever standard he desired, as long as it met the FCC's spectral efficiency standards (and related things such as tolerance of out of band interference, etc). The result is this very frustrating hodge podge of systems. In the short run, it certainly provides on benefit to US telecom providers: it reduces churn - it makes it harder for a consumer to change providers. In the long run, I think it will hurt them, because various applications (such as instant messaging, etc) will not appear as quickly or be as ubiquitous as they are in GSM countries.
BTW... the US is not the only country with multiple standards. Japan also has at least two.
Frankly, I wish the French or some other country had done the experiment so we in the US could have a single standard... but that's not how it worked out. We are the guinea pigs.
CDMA, btw, was invented by the president of Qualcomm, and would never have made it as a standard without this competitive build-out. In general, the "established" carriers took the proven approach - TDMA. Others took the gamble of the unproven technology (CDMA). CDMA is so bizarre that it was not really possible to predict it's bandwidth efficiency without large scale builds.
BTW... from a technical standpoint, CDMA is a very elegant way to do things. Basically, one takes a high rate pseudo-random bit sequence and multiplies the data stream (at a slower bit rate) by it. One transmits the result, perhaps after shifting the frequency.
The receiver has a synchronized pseudo-random bit sequence, and inverts the transform by multiplying the received RF signal (mixing) by it, and out of a loss pass filter appears the original data (audio) stream.It is a form of Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum technology.
Pretty cool - nice an isomorphic - with pseudorandom. I love it! I've loved DSS for years.
Interfering signals in the same bandwidth are multiplied, of course, by the same bit stream. But since it is pseudorandom, and the interfering signals are not correlated to it, they appear as broadband noise to the receiver. With techniques like this, you can also hide a signal so it is not detectable except by a receiver with the synchronized code. This stuff was first used for military secure and LPD (Low Probability of Detection) systems. The original inventor was the 1940's actress Heddy Lamar, who invented a system which multiplied music from a phonograph by audio (and recovered it by the same process). This was used to allow Roosevelt and Churchill to communicate over short wave radio without being deciphered.
Re:GSM (Score:2)
It's a strange world we live in.
Re:GSM (Score:2)
And you are quite right. Adding prescriptions to Medicare will probably result in price controls, which will greatly slow the world-wide progress in medication research.
Of course, that doesn't stop me from driving to Mexico to buy prescription drugs occasionally
Re:GSM (Score:2)
This is happening right now. Once $200 billion in Federal benefits are given US seniors, the next step will be Federal ceilings on drug prices (this is what has happened in every other country). Maine and Vermont are already looking into drug price ceilings.
check this out [cato.org]
Re:GSM (Score:3)
At no time did Hedy Lamarr [mcommercetimes.com] hold a position at Qualcomm...
Re:GSM (Score:2)
Re:GSM (Score:2)
Re:GSM (Score:3, Informative)
GSM has over 70% of the world market, and UMTS (or CDMA2000 1x etc) will not have anything like universal coverage for a long time... CDMA is more spectrum-efficient than GSM, but GSM is going to stay around particularly in rural areas where large cells are important and 3G won't have that sort of coverage. CDMA2000 1x is an easy upgrade from cdmaOne, but going to 1xEV-DO/DV (the true 3G versions) will be a similarly expensive operation.
GSM was decreed by the European standards bodies, but it has been an incredible success - you can use GSM phones in almost every country in the world, on over 400 networks. Call quality is great, coverage is good wherever I've been (including parts of India), and you have universal services such as short message service (text messaging).
Re:GSM (Score:1, Troll)
Re:GSM (Score:1)
Converting to GSM now then the rest of the world is just about to convert to 3G sounds... dumb.
Re:GSM (Score:1)
GSM is not very spectrum efficient (Score:3, Informative)
GSM works well, but suggesting it as a solution for spectrum efficiency is quite bizarre, particularly when cdmaOne (used by Sprint PCS and Verizon in the US) is more spectrum-efficient.
Re:GSM (Score:1)
Re:GSM (Score:2)
Interference Problems (Score:5, Funny)
Sounds a bit like DAMA... (Score:2)
Re:Sounds a bit like DAMA... (Score:2)
The article is *really* short on technical details, and even confuses directionality with frequency assignment.
Re:Sounds a bit like DAMA... (Score:1)
BUZZWORD ALERT! BUZZWORD ALERT! (Score:3, Funny)
For all we know, this project description might actually MEAN something.
Re:BUZZWORD ALERT! BUZZWORD ALERT! (Score:1)
Personal Privacy... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Personal Privacy... (Score:1)
Re:Personal Privacy... (Score:1)
Re:Personal Privacy... (Score:2, Interesting)
Can be done with CDMA too but I suspect it's not so common (since unlike TDMA there are no timeslots to co-ordinate between different users).
Pity the authorities don't make more use of this. If you ring the emergency services in the UK from a mobile phone, all the cellular operator passes on is the phone number you're calling from, not even the cell you're currently using. Could save a lot of time and trouble if they did.
It's not all bad though. Location information can help prove you weren't somewhere just as easily as it can help prove you were somewhere!
I don't think recording an _exact_ location is done as a matter of course, but it is common practice to keep track of the current registered cell (if only to save searching the whole network when there's an incoming call). In GSM the phones re-register periodically even if you don't switch cell so it's not uncommon to have the cell recorded every couple of hours.
Isn't the military part of the problem? (Score:2)
Spectrum Hogs (Score:2)
Re:Isn't the military part of the problem? (Score:2)
Re:Isn't the military part of the problem? (Score:1, Funny)
-Nano.
Re:Isn't the military part of the problem? (Score:1)
The Europeans don't field "decent" (I assume you mean large) armies because they don't need to. They do not conduct foreign policies that require substantial troop commitments. They don't have twelve aircraft carrier battlegroups like the US. They don't need them. Hell, we don't need them either.
~Chazzf
Re:Isn't the military part of the problem? (Score:2)
This may help that problem (Score:2)
Re:You should see the logo (Score:1)
Re:You should see the logo (Score:1)
Ironically, I think I'd trust them more... (Score:1)
Ironically, I WOULD trust them more than any "joint industry task force" put together to decide how best to organize radio spectrum. I'd rather have a big portion that's mysteriously ignored by most new radios than have a sysem in place for charging by-the-second for a sweep across the newly-digital dial.
Ryan Fenton
frequency allocations (Score:2)
We used to have a big poster of it on the wall at a VOIP company I worked at - know of an online version?
Re:frequency allocations (Score:5, Informative)
Re:frequency allocations (Score:2)
http://www.jsc.mil/images/speccht.jpg
Re:frequency allocations (Score:1)
One caveat: I ordered one of these back in about February, and I only just got it a few weeks ago! I'm happy though because the US Government Printing Office gave me an automatic discount when it was slow. I must say the couple of quarters or so really helped defray that horrible $3.00 cost.
Anyway, I'm home for summer and can't wait to get back up to school to see what it's like (it was shipped there, since I didn't count on such a long wait).
Military (Score:1)
Re:Military (Score:1, Insightful)
It's all about the moolah (Score:1)
So, this can only be a good thing in the end.
-Nano.
Sounds interesting (Score:2, Interesting)
Must be listening to George Gilder (Score:4, Insightful)
What? Use CW? (Score:2, Insightful)
Not backward compatible. (Score:3, Insightful)
But that's the point :-) (Score:3)
Cynicism aside, though, a lot of their existing communications tools are really expensive, and use old technology or newer technology that's made extra-complex to retain compatibility with older technology, and new equipment made with new commercially-viable parts can be *much* less expensive, often less expensive than maintaining existing equipment. For a computer example, compare the cost of buying a 1GHz 256M RAM 20GB disk machine today (about $400) with the cost of replacing fixing your 486 (which used different memory technology, EGA video, 5.25" disk drives, backup tape drives, no CDROMs, etc.) In some cases, the military does need militarized equipment (throwing radios around in trucks and dropping them off airplanes can be a bit rough), but often it's cheaper to buy 10 commercial units and have 8 of them break.
Re:But that's the point :-) (Score:1)
Sucks to be in combat and have one of those 8 units, though.
In other words: get real.
Re:But that's the point :-) (Score:2)
And remember all those M-16s jamming all the time in Nam? The commercial gun that the Army started with when they developed it was apparently much less likely to jam, but by the time it got kluged up into a more military-looking gun, it jammed more.
Re:But that's the point :-) (Score:1)
Err, no. The AR-15 was developed by a man named Stoner to BE a military weapon. Armalite may have released a commercial version of it first, but it was always a military weapon by design, with military, not sporting, priorities.
As for the jamming, that was not a "military" design decision so much as a "DOD" design decision. McNamara decided that chrome plating the chamber of the rifle was simply not necessary and struck it off the specification to save a few $.01's.
Although, what the hell - the guy has enough deaths on his tally; what's a few more attributed to technical ignorance?
Software radio (Score:2)
July 26, 1947 (Score:3, Informative)
How does this effect future SETI searches? (Score:1)
Turning our attention to observing planets outside our solar system: would our current SETI searches be able to tell that such a radio spectrum represented information content? If not, how would a SETI search have to be organized to recognize this signature of a radio-active
--Forgotten Password
yes we must porno faster to the shitter (Score:1)