© 2003 hewlett-packard development company, l.p

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Page 1: © 2003 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P
Page 2: © 2003 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P

© 2003 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P.The information contained herein is subject to change without notice

Wireless & Mobility

Michael Flanagan

Page 3: © 2003 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P

Mobility is about Services

Usage nodes Networks Services

Communications &

organization

Networking &

computing

Location &

context

• WLAN• WWAN• DSL• Cable

modem• Packet radio• Dial-up• LAN

•Voice service• Messaging & email• IM and chat• Emergency services• Internet access• Remote access• Online workspace• Local printing/display• Mobile content• Entertainment• Enterprise apps• Gaming• Payment services• Banking• Photos and imaging

SecurityManagement

Page 4: © 2003 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P

wireless technology primer

Device-to-device Cable-replacement

(not wLAN) Allows local (3m)

access to devices to share capabilities

TDMA (IS-136)

GSM

PDC cdmaOne

GPRS

1xRTT

EDGE

WCDMA

cdma2000 MC

Carrier dependent Speed is an issue Competing with

Hotspot

Wireless LAN Network extension Security addressed

(802.1x, 802.11i, WPA, WEP)

Choose your version (802.11b – g – a)

Wide Area Wide Area NetworkNetwork

LAN

(802.11)

LA

N

PersonalArea Network

(802.15)

11b – 2.4GHz, 11Mbps, 3 usable channels, ~300 foot coverage

11g – 2.4Ghz, 54Mbps, 3 usable channels, ~300 foot coverage

11a – 5GGHz, 54Mbps, 12 usable channels, ~80 foot coverage

Page 5: © 2003 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P

WiMAX

• Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access, wireless "last mile" broadband technologies

• First WiMax-certified products will likely be base stations for carriers. WiMax base stations can blanket an area by connecting to a wired connection or linking with other base stations.

• Base stations will be able to connect to other base stations within a range of up to 30 miles with data transfer speeds of up to 75 megabits per second.

• Subscriber stations, the set-top box-like devices, will connect to base stations with ranges of up to three miles and transfer speeds of up to 15 megabits per second.

Use of broadband connections in the United States shot up 42 percent to 28.3 million connections in 2003

Federal Communications Commission

Page 6: © 2003 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P

RFID (Radio Frequency Identification)

RFID is a generic term for technologies that use radio waves to automatically identify individual items. There are several methods of identifying objects using RFID, but the most common is to store a serial number that identifies a product, and perhaps other information, on a microchip that is attached to an antenna (the chip and the antenna together are called an RFID transponder or an RFID tag)• U.S. Department of Defense Mandated RFID tagging in 1 year• More than 50,000 containers enter US ports every day. 12,000 trucks enter the

US across the Mexican border alone … Only 1 – 2% are inspected.• 3.2 million children under five die of food related illnesses every year • Up to 20% of foods are discarded due to spoilage in the supply chain (US FDA)• Product diversion, including smuggling, is large and increasing• Direct and indirect cost of cargo theft is $20-60B yearly

Page 7: © 2003 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P

How does RFID work?Key components of RFID process

Tag ReaderAntenna Middleware Supply chain execution

What each key component does…

- Coiled antenna ofreader creates magnetic field with coiled antenna of tag- Waves turns into digital information

- Each item has a “tag” attached to it or embedded In it- Transmits identification data to a reader

-Transmit data tomiddleware- Associates tag info with product info

- Process information from reader- Filters data- Sends data tobackend servers

- Backend SCE or ERPsystems receives Information

Examples of SCE:- Updates inventory- Notifies shipment arrival- Triggers procurement

Page 8: © 2003 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P

Seamless Secure Data Network Roaming

Network(Wired, WLAN, PwLAN, GPRS, CDMA, 1xRTT, Edge,

UMTS, DSL, cable, dial-up)

Client-side applications

Security & Home Agent(IPSec, WTLS, VPN, IPv4)

Corporate applications

Security & Foreign Agent(IPsec, WTLS, VPN, IPv4 Mobility)

Connection manager

No change!!!

No change!!!

Page 9: © 2003 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P

wWAN

connector

E-Mail

Providing end-to-end mobility solutions"... all I want to do is get email when I'm traveling ..."

PDA Notebook TabletPCSmart Phone

connector

Safety

connector

Health

connector

Supply

wLAN none

Application

Access Device

Network

Page 10: © 2003 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P

PDA Notebook TabletPCSmart Phone

Security & Management

wWAN wLAN none

Providing end-to-end mobility solutionsDoing it the right way

Application

Access Device

Network

Application Integration Layer

connector

Supply

connector

E-Mail

connector

Safety

connector

Health

Page 11: © 2003 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P

“As a result of your ability to open the eyes of our community leaders as to the possibilities and

benefits in making the City of St Cloud a wireless community, you have laid the ground work for us to implement an ambitious program to make the city one of the first 100% wireless communities in

the US. ”

Jonathan Baltuch

President, MRI

Page 12: © 2003 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P

City of St. Cloud / Stevens Plantation

• High speed interent access for the Stevens Plantation mixed use development

• Network infrastructure to improve public safety

• Internet access from public locations

Requirements Community benefits

The City of St. Cloud plans to be the most technologically advanced community in Florida

The HP difference• Mobility strategy• Engaging all

stakeholders • Developer, city

government, public safety

•Strategy in place•Phased implementation•Designed for growth

Page 13: © 2003 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P

Greater Toronto Airport Authority

• Wireless-enable existing applications

• Create wireless applications for GTAA

• Segment bandwidth

• Provide value-add wireless services to the public

• Centrally manage system access, security, bandwidth allocation

• Offer QoS levels and SLAs with pricing options

Requirements Customer benefits

GTAA responded to heightened security and expense constraints with a state of the art solution

The HP difference• Technical depth• Wireless airport

solution expertise

•Improved security and efficiency

•Tenant satisfaction•Greater reliability, interoperability and productivity

•Location flexibility—no cabling is needed

•New revenue-generating services opportunities

Page 14: © 2003 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P

HP Mobility Lifecycle Solution ModulesHP Mobility Lifecycle Solution Modules

Fast Start Workshop

Hardware & Software

Maintenance

Remote Monitoring

Enterprise Service

Desk

mobilityarchitectur

e services

managedmobilityservices

mobility assessment

services

design service

s

implementationservicespilot services

‘art of the possible’

strategyservices

securitysecurity

designdesign

buildbuild

integrateintegrate managemanage

supportsupportevolveevolve

managemanage

integrateintegrate

Wireless LAN (PWLAN)

Mobile Messaging

Mobile Sales/Service

Mobile Enterprise Apps

Open Roaming

Vertical solutions

Support servicesevolve

Page 15: © 2003 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P