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What to do With the Wi-Fi Wild West

Objectif

The last few years have witnessed a significant increase in the use of portable devices, especially smartphones and tablets thanks to their functionality, user-friendly interface, and affordable price. Most of these devices use Wi-Fi Access Points (AP) where possible, in addition to 3G/4G, to connect to the Internet due to its speed, maturity and efficiency.

Given this demand, Wi-Fi is facing mounting issues of spectrum efficiency due to its utilisation of non-licensed frequency bands, so improvements continue to be added to standards in order to improve performance and adapt it to new demands. For example, as Wi-Fi saturation increases in areas, such as business centres, malls, campuses or even whole European cities, interference between these competing APs can begin to negatively impact users’ experience. At the same time, real-time interactive services have grown in popularity and are now used across a range of mobile devices. These share the same connection with “traditional” applications, such as e-mail and Web browsing, but are far more bandwidth intensive and require consistent network capacity to meet user Quality of Experience demands.

In this context, Wi-5 Project (What to do With the Wi-Fi Wild West) proposes an architecture based on an integrated and coordinated set of smart solutions able to efficiently reduce interference between neighbouring APs and provide optimised connectivity for new and emerging services. Cooperating mechanisms will be integrated into Wi-Fi equipment at different layers of the protocol stack with the aim of meeting a demanding set of goals:

• Support seamless hand-over to improve user experience with real-time interactive services
• Develop new business models to optimise available Wi-Fi spectrum in urban areas, public spaces, and offices
• Integrate novel smart functionalities into APs to address radio spectrum congestion and current usage inefficiency, thus increasing global throughput and achieving energy savings

Appel à propositions

H2020-ICT-2014

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Sous appel

H2020-ICT-2014-1

Coordinateur

LIVERPOOL JOHN MOORES UNIVERSITY
Contribution nette de l'UE
€ 778 640,36
Adresse
RODNEY STREET 2 EGERTON COURT
L3 5UX Liverpool
Royaume-Uni

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Région
North West (England) Merseyside Liverpool
Type d’activité
Higher or Secondary Education Establishments
Liens
Coût total
€ 779 778,36

Participants (5)