- Gebundenes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
Publisher's Note: Products purchased from Third Party sellers are not guaranteed by the publisher for quality, authenticity, or access to any online entitlements included with the product. > >Now that CDMA has been accepted as a key component of worldwide 3G systems, service providers, capacity planners, engineers and technicians need to understand the best methods and tools for maximizing throughput, capacity, and quality. This book provides that expertise.
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- Steve LeeSpread Spectrum Cdma82,99 €
- Joseph ShapiraCDMA Radio with Repeaters184,99 €
- Joseph ShapiraCdma Radio with Repeaters110,99 €
- Indu Lal ShakyaHigh Capacity CDMA and Collaborative Techniques51,99 €
- Lajos HanzoNear-Capacity Multi-Functional MIMO Systems261,99 €
- Usha Kumari ChintalapatiA New Erlang Capacity Estimation Algorithm Based on CCI Probability55,99 €
- Wideband CDMA for Third Generation Mobile Communications172,99 €
-
-
-
Publisher's Note: Products purchased from Third Party sellers are not guaranteed by the publisher for quality, authenticity, or access to any online entitlements included with the product. > >Now that CDMA has been accepted as a key component of worldwide 3G systems, service providers, capacity planners, engineers and technicians need to understand the best methods and tools for maximizing throughput, capacity, and quality. This book provides that expertise.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: McGraw Hill LLC
- Seitenzahl: 627
- Erscheinungstermin: 18. März 2003
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 243mm x 197mm x 49mm
- Gewicht: 1315g
- ISBN-13: 9780071399197
- ISBN-10: 0071399194
- Artikelnr.: 21924862
- Verlag: McGraw Hill LLC
- Seitenzahl: 627
- Erscheinungstermin: 18. März 2003
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 243mm x 197mm x 49mm
- Gewicht: 1315g
- ISBN-13: 9780071399197
- ISBN-10: 0071399194
- Artikelnr.: 21924862
Adam Rosenberg (Atlanta, GA) is an industrial mathematician who has built decision-support systems for telephone companies, airlines, railroads, automobile resellers, and hotels. Dr. Rosenberg was part of the Advanced Mobile Phone Service systems engineering group at Bell Laboratories. Later he worked for InterDigital Communications Corporation on broadband CDMA, where he did statistical capacity analysis of CDMA for wireless local loop. He holds a Ph.D. from Stanford in Operations Research, and an A.B. in mathematics from Princeton University.
Section 1: KEY RADIO CONCEPTS
Chapter 1: Radio Engineering Concepts
Chapter 2: The User Terminal
Chapter 3: The CDMA Mobile System
Chapter 4: The Base Station
Chapter 5: Basic Wireless Telephony
Chapter 6: Analog Wireless Telephony (AMPS)
Chapter 7: TDMA Wireless Telephony (GSM)
Chapter 8: The CDMA Principle
Section 2: STANDARDS FOR CELLULAR SYSTEMS
Chapter 9: General Cellular Standards
Chapter 10: Worldwide CDMA Standards
Section 3: KEY TELEPHONE CONCEPTS
Chapter 11: The PSTN and Telephone Switching
Chapter 12: Telephony Engineering Concepts
Chapter 13: Telephone Transport
Chapter 14: Signaling with SS7
Chapter 15: ANSI-41
Chapter 16: Call States
Section 4: KEY DATA CONCEPTS
Chapter 17: Quality of Service (QoS)
Chapter 18: Speech Coding
Chapter 19: Hybrid Voice-Data Networks
Chapter 20: Short Message Service (SMS)
Chapter 21: Wireless Data Service
Section 5: CAPACITY AND QUALITY PRINCIPLES
Chapter 22: Capacity and Quality Tradeoffs
Chapter 23: Traffic Engineering for Voice and Data
Chapter 24: Switching Capacity
Chapter 25: ANSI-41 Signaling Capacity
Chapter 26: Capacity Calculations for Cellular Networks
Chapter 27: Conventional Reuse Principles
Chapter 28: CDMA Principles for Multicellular Systems
Chapter 29: CDMA Data Capacity Principles
Chapter 30: Capacity Issues Specific to CDMA
Section 6: PLANNING FOR CDMA CAPACITY
Chapter 31: Estimating Wireless Telephone Demand
Chapter 32: Planning Locations for Base Stations
Chapter 33: Base Station Planning
Chapter 34: Mobile Switching Center (MSC) Planning
Chapter 35: Backhaul Planning
Chapter 36: Signaling Capacity Planning
Chapter 37: MSC Transport Planning
Chapter 38: Special Situations
Section 7: INCREASING CAPACITY
Chapter 39: Measuring System Performance for Growth
Chapter 40: Turning Your Complaints into Useful Data
Chapter 41: Increasing Capacity of a Base Station
Chapter 42: Adding Cells to a CDMA Station
Chapter 43: Mobile Switching Center (MSC) Growth
Chapter 44: Adding Transport
Chapter 45: Regional Growth in a Specific Area
Section 8: MODELING FOR CDMA
Chapter 46: Business-Case Models
Chapter 47: Propagation Models
Chapter 48: Subscriber Traffic Modeling
Section 9: CONCLUSION
Chapter 49: CDMA Now and in the Future
Appendix A: Acronyms
Appendix B: Physical Units
Glossary
References
Index
About the Authors
Chapter 1: Radio Engineering Concepts
Chapter 2: The User Terminal
Chapter 3: The CDMA Mobile System
Chapter 4: The Base Station
Chapter 5: Basic Wireless Telephony
Chapter 6: Analog Wireless Telephony (AMPS)
Chapter 7: TDMA Wireless Telephony (GSM)
Chapter 8: The CDMA Principle
Section 2: STANDARDS FOR CELLULAR SYSTEMS
Chapter 9: General Cellular Standards
Chapter 10: Worldwide CDMA Standards
Section 3: KEY TELEPHONE CONCEPTS
Chapter 11: The PSTN and Telephone Switching
Chapter 12: Telephony Engineering Concepts
Chapter 13: Telephone Transport
Chapter 14: Signaling with SS7
Chapter 15: ANSI-41
Chapter 16: Call States
Section 4: KEY DATA CONCEPTS
Chapter 17: Quality of Service (QoS)
Chapter 18: Speech Coding
Chapter 19: Hybrid Voice-Data Networks
Chapter 20: Short Message Service (SMS)
Chapter 21: Wireless Data Service
Section 5: CAPACITY AND QUALITY PRINCIPLES
Chapter 22: Capacity and Quality Tradeoffs
Chapter 23: Traffic Engineering for Voice and Data
Chapter 24: Switching Capacity
Chapter 25: ANSI-41 Signaling Capacity
Chapter 26: Capacity Calculations for Cellular Networks
Chapter 27: Conventional Reuse Principles
Chapter 28: CDMA Principles for Multicellular Systems
Chapter 29: CDMA Data Capacity Principles
Chapter 30: Capacity Issues Specific to CDMA
Section 6: PLANNING FOR CDMA CAPACITY
Chapter 31: Estimating Wireless Telephone Demand
Chapter 32: Planning Locations for Base Stations
Chapter 33: Base Station Planning
Chapter 34: Mobile Switching Center (MSC) Planning
Chapter 35: Backhaul Planning
Chapter 36: Signaling Capacity Planning
Chapter 37: MSC Transport Planning
Chapter 38: Special Situations
Section 7: INCREASING CAPACITY
Chapter 39: Measuring System Performance for Growth
Chapter 40: Turning Your Complaints into Useful Data
Chapter 41: Increasing Capacity of a Base Station
Chapter 42: Adding Cells to a CDMA Station
Chapter 43: Mobile Switching Center (MSC) Growth
Chapter 44: Adding Transport
Chapter 45: Regional Growth in a Specific Area
Section 8: MODELING FOR CDMA
Chapter 46: Business-Case Models
Chapter 47: Propagation Models
Chapter 48: Subscriber Traffic Modeling
Section 9: CONCLUSION
Chapter 49: CDMA Now and in the Future
Appendix A: Acronyms
Appendix B: Physical Units
Glossary
References
Index
About the Authors
Section 1: KEY RADIO CONCEPTS
Chapter 1: Radio Engineering Concepts
Chapter 2: The User Terminal
Chapter 3: The CDMA Mobile System
Chapter 4: The Base Station
Chapter 5: Basic Wireless Telephony
Chapter 6: Analog Wireless Telephony (AMPS)
Chapter 7: TDMA Wireless Telephony (GSM)
Chapter 8: The CDMA Principle
Section 2: STANDARDS FOR CELLULAR SYSTEMS
Chapter 9: General Cellular Standards
Chapter 10: Worldwide CDMA Standards
Section 3: KEY TELEPHONE CONCEPTS
Chapter 11: The PSTN and Telephone Switching
Chapter 12: Telephony Engineering Concepts
Chapter 13: Telephone Transport
Chapter 14: Signaling with SS7
Chapter 15: ANSI-41
Chapter 16: Call States
Section 4: KEY DATA CONCEPTS
Chapter 17: Quality of Service (QoS)
Chapter 18: Speech Coding
Chapter 19: Hybrid Voice-Data Networks
Chapter 20: Short Message Service (SMS)
Chapter 21: Wireless Data Service
Section 5: CAPACITY AND QUALITY PRINCIPLES
Chapter 22: Capacity and Quality Tradeoffs
Chapter 23: Traffic Engineering for Voice and Data
Chapter 24: Switching Capacity
Chapter 25: ANSI-41 Signaling Capacity
Chapter 26: Capacity Calculations for Cellular Networks
Chapter 27: Conventional Reuse Principles
Chapter 28: CDMA Principles for Multicellular Systems
Chapter 29: CDMA Data Capacity Principles
Chapter 30: Capacity Issues Specific to CDMA
Section 6: PLANNING FOR CDMA CAPACITY
Chapter 31: Estimating Wireless Telephone Demand
Chapter 32: Planning Locations for Base Stations
Chapter 33: Base Station Planning
Chapter 34: Mobile Switching Center (MSC) Planning
Chapter 35: Backhaul Planning
Chapter 36: Signaling Capacity Planning
Chapter 37: MSC Transport Planning
Chapter 38: Special Situations
Section 7: INCREASING CAPACITY
Chapter 39: Measuring System Performance for Growth
Chapter 40: Turning Your Complaints into Useful Data
Chapter 41: Increasing Capacity of a Base Station
Chapter 42: Adding Cells to a CDMA Station
Chapter 43: Mobile Switching Center (MSC) Growth
Chapter 44: Adding Transport
Chapter 45: Regional Growth in a Specific Area
Section 8: MODELING FOR CDMA
Chapter 46: Business-Case Models
Chapter 47: Propagation Models
Chapter 48: Subscriber Traffic Modeling
Section 9: CONCLUSION
Chapter 49: CDMA Now and in the Future
Appendix A: Acronyms
Appendix B: Physical Units
Glossary
References
Index
About the Authors
Chapter 1: Radio Engineering Concepts
Chapter 2: The User Terminal
Chapter 3: The CDMA Mobile System
Chapter 4: The Base Station
Chapter 5: Basic Wireless Telephony
Chapter 6: Analog Wireless Telephony (AMPS)
Chapter 7: TDMA Wireless Telephony (GSM)
Chapter 8: The CDMA Principle
Section 2: STANDARDS FOR CELLULAR SYSTEMS
Chapter 9: General Cellular Standards
Chapter 10: Worldwide CDMA Standards
Section 3: KEY TELEPHONE CONCEPTS
Chapter 11: The PSTN and Telephone Switching
Chapter 12: Telephony Engineering Concepts
Chapter 13: Telephone Transport
Chapter 14: Signaling with SS7
Chapter 15: ANSI-41
Chapter 16: Call States
Section 4: KEY DATA CONCEPTS
Chapter 17: Quality of Service (QoS)
Chapter 18: Speech Coding
Chapter 19: Hybrid Voice-Data Networks
Chapter 20: Short Message Service (SMS)
Chapter 21: Wireless Data Service
Section 5: CAPACITY AND QUALITY PRINCIPLES
Chapter 22: Capacity and Quality Tradeoffs
Chapter 23: Traffic Engineering for Voice and Data
Chapter 24: Switching Capacity
Chapter 25: ANSI-41 Signaling Capacity
Chapter 26: Capacity Calculations for Cellular Networks
Chapter 27: Conventional Reuse Principles
Chapter 28: CDMA Principles for Multicellular Systems
Chapter 29: CDMA Data Capacity Principles
Chapter 30: Capacity Issues Specific to CDMA
Section 6: PLANNING FOR CDMA CAPACITY
Chapter 31: Estimating Wireless Telephone Demand
Chapter 32: Planning Locations for Base Stations
Chapter 33: Base Station Planning
Chapter 34: Mobile Switching Center (MSC) Planning
Chapter 35: Backhaul Planning
Chapter 36: Signaling Capacity Planning
Chapter 37: MSC Transport Planning
Chapter 38: Special Situations
Section 7: INCREASING CAPACITY
Chapter 39: Measuring System Performance for Growth
Chapter 40: Turning Your Complaints into Useful Data
Chapter 41: Increasing Capacity of a Base Station
Chapter 42: Adding Cells to a CDMA Station
Chapter 43: Mobile Switching Center (MSC) Growth
Chapter 44: Adding Transport
Chapter 45: Regional Growth in a Specific Area
Section 8: MODELING FOR CDMA
Chapter 46: Business-Case Models
Chapter 47: Propagation Models
Chapter 48: Subscriber Traffic Modeling
Section 9: CONCLUSION
Chapter 49: CDMA Now and in the Future
Appendix A: Acronyms
Appendix B: Physical Units
Glossary
References
Index
About the Authors