DD
MM
YYYY

PAGES

DD
MM
YYYY

spot_img

PAGES

Home Blog Page 7439

Redesigning mobile network to support machine-type communication devices as IoT advances

0

With several billion devices expected to be connected to the Internet of Things (IoT) over the next few years, character of the mobile network will be changed completely. The types of devices involved broadly fall into two categories: massive machine-type communication (MTC) and mission-critical MTC. The demands these place on the network are very different from each other, as well as from those of traditional mobile terminals or user equipment. The resulting IoT ecosystem will be complex—multi-layered and cross-disciplinary as shown schematically in the figure.

Schematic of the proposed IoT ecosystem | MTC
Schematic of the proposed IoT ecosystem

Massive MTC

Protocols developed for mobile phones, smartphones and tablets are unnecessarily complex for high-volume non-speech devices that will be used for massive MTC, and these devices will also need to be low-power in order to have ultra-long battery life, and must have a low unit cost.

Massive MTC use cases include connected lifestyles and healthcare applications such as wearable technology, as well as smartenergy, public infrastructure and industrial automation. These applications generally have intermittent, low data rate requirements and no particular latency constraints, so will not need the high data rates promised for 5G.

Nevertheless, the sheer volume of devices forecast to connect to the IoT means that eventually the capacity of 5G will be needed to support these all. In the meantime, new low-complexity protocols are being introduced for 4G, which will allow significant numbers of MTC devices to work on 4G LTE networks up to and beyond the launch of 5G.

3GPP LTE-M standard (also known as Cat-M or Cat-M1) will enable lower-cost, lower-power M2M devices to work within the currently available mobile networks, and will also offer modes that improve in-building coverage.

Two further IoT standards, enhanced coverage GSM (EC-GSM) and narrow-band IoT (NB-IoT), are also being introduced. EC-GSM, as its name suggests, uses legacy 2G technology, while NB-IoT can be used with either 4G LTE or for re-farming of GSM channels.

NB-IoT is a new narrow-band radio technology introduced by 3GPP to specifically address the requirements of the IoT. Standardisation began in September 2015 and is still ongoing. It is designed to improve indoor coverage as well as provide support for a massive number of low-cost, low-throughput devices with low device power consumption and optimised network architecture.

NB-IoT can either be deployed in-band, utilising resource blocks within a normal LTE carrier or its guard band, or in a standalone mode for deployments in non-LTE spectrum. It will entail a radical change to the physical layer, occupying a bandwidth of only 200kHz including guard-bands. This allows one GSM/GPRS channel to be directly replaced by one NB-IoT channel, or many more to be accommodated within an LTE channel where it can share capacity and mobile-site resources with regular LTE data traffic, thus enabling LTE networks to accommodate many more MTC devices.

Mission-critical MTC

At the opposite end of the scale, mission-critical MTC applications include driverless vehicles and robot surgery, and will have stringent requirements on both reliability and low latency. These form one of the key use cases for 5G, and new network strategies including mobile edge computing (MEC) are being developed to cater to these.

The accelerating development of 5G is partly being driven by a demand for expanding the networks to enable the secritical IoT use cases, where the need for low-latency and high-reliability devices cannot be met using existing connectivity technologies.

READ
Peripheral touch controller with superior water tolerance now available on several Microchip MCUs

Looking to the future, 4G, 5G and legacy mobile will all form part of the eventual IoT mix. Many IoT devices need to operate indoors, so issues of in-building penetration need to be addressed as well. New architectures and frequency bands may be needed to improve indoor coverage. A mixture of heterogeneous networks (HetNets) using small cells, Wi-Fi offload and more innovative indoor coverage solutions such as intelligent digital DAS (idDAS), which allows mobile operators to use flexible repeater solutions to dynamically allocate capacity within buildings or areas is expected to form part of the solution.

Software-defined networks utilising network function virtualisation and self-optimising networks will increasingly be used by operators to help make networks more flexible and responsive to changes in demand. These will form an integral part of the development of the IoT, and in managing network resources to cope with the extra traffic that it will generate.

Network test and validation

These large volumes and diversity of devices and applications will introduce a new set of challenges in testing and validation, not only for the devices themselves but also for the networks that will support these. Mobile networks that are being expanded to include the IoT will also need new kinds of testing, and the effect of loading the network with millions of these devices will need to be validated.

Although individual devices may not need much bandwidth, with millions more devices coming online, efficiencies of 4G and 5G will be required, in order to increase the overall capacity of the network to be able to handle these.

Availability of network validation tools that emulate realistic data usage scenarios has been vital to the development and rollout of LTE, and in the future it will be equally important to include the characteristics of the predicted volume of IoT devices in the traffic models, in order to ensure quality of service and quality of user experience as 5G networks develop.

The philosophy of testing by design will provide the wireless industry with the blueprint to begin developing this framework, and this will necessitate the use of a validation environment based on virtualised network functions that can apply realistic scenarios for all types of users—consumers, businesses and things.

Latest generation of TM500 network test system already has the capability to emulate certain types of M2M/MTC devices, to evaluate the effect on the network of connecting large numbers of these low-power, low-complexity devices. This helps network operators and infrastructure vendors to validate 4G mobile network performance in preparation for deploying IoT connectivity.


Phil Medd is senior technical product manager, Cobham Wireless

How to prevent and manage hypertension

0

High blood pressure (also known as hypertension) is the health condition of having blood pressure readings above 140/90 mmHg, over a number of weeks. High blood pressure is a major health risk because it puts extra strain on your heart and blood vessels.
People with high blood pressure are susceptible to stroke, kidney diseases and heart failure. It is popularly called the silent killer for good reason; high blood pressure gives no direct signs or symptoms.

Diet and stress are the main precursors of high blood pressure. People with unhealthy eating habits and stressful lifestyles are advised to check their blood pressure monthly.
Besides serving as a reminder to live healthy, frequent blood pressure checks can help you detect this health condition, so you can take steps to lowering it.

Here are some simple tips for controlling blood pressure:

1) Lose some weight

Blood pressure often increases with body mass index. Being overweight disrupts breathing while sleeping (sleep apnea) in some, this further raises blood pressure.
Weight loss is an effective lifestyle change for controlling blood pressure.

2) Exercising regularly

Frequent physical activity for 30 minutes on most days of the week has be proven to lower blood pressure by 4-9 mm HG. Consistency is important for people diagnosed with high blood pressure, stopping may lead to a relapse. Cycling, jogging, walking, dancing and walking are some of the best types of exercise for lowering blood pressure.

3) Eat a healthy diet

A change in the diet is recommended by physicians advising on lowering high blood pressure. Consume more whole grain meals, vegetables, and low-fat dairy products. Salt and high blood pressure are not good friends. Cut salt from your meals gradually and substitute with natural spices to reduce blood pressure. Reduce the size of your meal portions; eat foods low in cholesterol and saturated fats.

4) Quit smoking, decrease alcohol intake, and reduce caffeine consumption

Regulate habits like smoking, alcohol consumption, soft drinks and caffeine intake. Smoking is a habit that must go; nicotine increases the blood pressure, heart rate, narrows your artilleries and makes your blood more likely to clot (this sets you up for an heart attack or stroke).

5) Reduce your stress

Chronic stress is a top contributor to high blood pressure. Try to figure out what causes your stress. Try organizing possible causes, such as family, work, illness and finance. Once you determine what causes your stress, start considering how to eliminate them.

6) Potassium rich food

Eating potassium rich fruit and vegetable helps in lowering blood pressure. Tomatoes, potatoes, bananas, beans, peas and dried fruits such as resins are rich sources of potassium.

From Doctors on Kangpe.com

As AI improves, BlackRock is replacing about 15% of its stock pickers with algorithms

0
The Canary Wharf financial district is seen at dusk in London, Britain November 7, 2014. REUTERS/Toby Melville

The robots are coming for Wall Street’s jobs. BlackRock is replacing about 15% of its stock pickers with algorithms and mathematical models.

Some $30 billion in assets (about 11 percent of active equity funds) will be targeted, with $6 billion rebranded BlackRock Advantage funds. These funds focus on quantitative and other strategies that adopt a more rules-based approach to investing.

As part of the restructuring, seven of BlackRock’s 53 stock pickers are expected to step down from their funds. Several of the money managers will stay on as advisers. At least 36 employees connected to the funds are leaving the firm.

Adoption of AI in Finance

Most banks and credit unions are in the early stages of adopting AI technologies. According to a survey conducted by Narrative Science in conjunction with the National Business Research Institute, 32% of financial services executives surveyed confirmed using AI technologies such as predictive analytics, recommendation engines, voice recognition and response.

For those firms not adopting AI, challenges such as fear of failure, siloed data sets and regulatory compliance were cited. Based on the Narrative Science survey, 12% of the overall group weren’t using AI yet because they felt it was too new, untested or weren’t sure about the security.

A recent Accenture report noted that in 3 years, most banks will be doing more via AI as they interact with customers.

Artificial intelligence (AI) will become the primary way banks interact with their customers within the next three years, according to three quarters of bankers surveyed by consultancy Accenture in a new report.

Four in five bankers believe AI will “revolutionise” the way in which banks gather information as well as how they interact with their clients, said the Accenture Banking Technology Vision 2017 report, which surveyed more than 600 top bankers and also consulted tech industry experts and academics.

Beyond Finance

This trend goes beyond finance as Robots are already eliminating human jobs. New data from the National Bureau of Economic Research suggests for every one of them deployed in a manufacturing or industrial facility, the jobs of six people are eliminated.

New research released from the National Bureau of Economic Research yesterday shows that between 1990 and 2007, when one or more industrial robots were introduced into the workforce, it led to the elimination of 6.2 jobs within a local area where people commute for work.

The report, which was authored by economists Daron Acemoglu of MIT and Pascual Restrepo of Boston University, found that the wages of workers also declined slightly as a result of robots entering the U.S. economy. Wages dropped between 0.25 percent and 0.50 percent per 1,000 employees when one or more robots came into the picture.

Amazon founder Jeff Bezos now the world’s second-richest man, bought Souq and could come for Konga

0

Jeff Bezos became the world’s second-richest man. The Amazon founder has a net worth of $75.6 billion on the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, passing Warren Buffett. Amazon’s already rising stock surged after it announced this week the acquisition of Dubai-based online retailer Souq.com. Barclays expects the company’s market cap to reach $1 trillion.

Bezos, 53, added $1.5 billion to his fortune as Amazon.com Inc. rose $18.32 on Wednesday, the day after the e-commerce giant said it plans to buy Dubai-based online retailer Souq.com. Bezos has a net worth of $75.6 billion on the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, $700 million more than Berkshire Hathaway Inc.’s Buffett and $1.3 billion above Ortega, the founder of Inditex S.A. and Europe’s richest person.

Buffett, who’s added $1.7 billion in 2017, has shed $4.7 billion since his fortune peaked at $79.6 billion on March 1. Ortega is up $2.1 billion year-to-date. Bezos remains $10.4 billion behind Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates, the world’s richest person with $86 billion.

Konga in Play

With the acquisition of Souq.com, there is likelihood that Amazon may be interested in Konga.com. Amazon has always built its businesses from scratch in emerging economies which include India, but with the plan to buy Souq.com, there is chance it may have changed strategy to be growing through acquisition.

This is the news Konga.com may like to hear. But Nigeria has to get out of recession first.

How to prevent diabetes

0

It is very important to make diabetes prevention a priority if you are at increased risk of diabetes, for example, if you’re overweight or have a family history of the disease.

Diabetes can be prevented by doing things as simple as eating more healthy food, becoming more physically active and shedding some weight. It is never too late to start making those simple changes in your lifestyle, as they will help you avoid the serious health complications of diabetes such as nerve, kidney and heart damage.

Here are some tips to help you:

Physical activity:

There are many benefits to regular physical activity. Exercise can help you lose weight, lower your blood sugar and boost your sensitivity to insulin — which helps keep your blood sugar within a normal range

Eat lots of fiber:

Fiber helps reduce your risk of diabetes by improving your blood sugar control. It also lower your risk of heart disease and helps promote weight loss by helping you feel full. Foods rich in fiber include fruits, vegetables, beans, whole grains, nuts and seeds

Whole grains:

Whole grains may reduce your risk of diabetes and help maintain blood sugar levels. Many foods made from whole grains come ready to eat, including various breads, pasta products and cereals

Shed some weight:

If you’re overweight, diabetes prevention may hinge on weight loss. Every kilo you lose can improve your health, and you may be surprised by how much

Eat healthy food:

This can help you manage your weight and lower your chances of getting type 2 diabetes. Eat more vegetables, fruits, and whole grains. Cut back on high-fat foods like whole milk, cheeses, and fried foods. This will help you reduce the amount of fat and calories you take in each day

From Doctors on Kangpe