Mobile Wireless Internet Forum Assesses IP Viability in Radio Access
Networks for 3G Systems, Concludes IP Comparable to ATM for Transport
Layer 

FREMONT, Calif., Feb. 19 /PRNewswire/ via NewsEdge Corporation - The
Mobile Wireless Internet Forum's (MWIF) Technical Committee today
announced that one of its working groups, IP in the Radio Access Network
(IP in the RAN) completed work on MWIF Technical Report MTR-006. 

The IP in the RAN Working Group 4 (WG4) concluded its work on the "IP in
the RAN as a Transport Option in 3rd Generation Mobile Systems MWIF
Technical Report in early January. The report is the result of a 9-month
feasibility study of Internet Protocol as a transport network option
within two current and evolving 3G mobile systems: RAN and UTRAN
(Universal Terrestrial Radio Access Network). 

WG4 Chairman James Kempf highlighted the group's major conclusion that
IP as a transport layer works as well or better than the R99-standard
ATM. 

"The IP in the Ran working group assessed whether IP could be used in
the 3GPP R99 UTRAN. The conventional wisdom was that IP transport on
E1/T1 with HDLC framing would not have the necessary delay, jitter and
bandwidth to compete with ATM transport," said Kempf. "Because operators
prefer to use E1/T1 and other layers for their lower cost and greater
flexibility, our study assumed that the existing UTRAN architecture and
radio control protocols remain unchanged, with IP introduced for the
transport layer only, in place of the ATM layer specified in the R99
standard. 

"The results of the study show that with the proper combination of
multiplexing and compression, IP is fully comparable with ATM for
handling expected loads," noted Kempf, who is also a Senior Staff
Engineer at Sun Microsystems (Nasdaq: SUNW). "As a result of this
feasibility study, 3GPP has formed an ad hoc group examining how IP as
the transport layer can be introduced into the next UTRAN standard." 

UTRAN is being developed by 3GPP (Third Generation Partnership Project)
for FDD and TDD modes. The IP transport option will be supported in the
3GPP2 (Third Generation Partnership Project II) open Abis specification
(currently being balloted) and a future release of the 3GPP2
Interoperability specification (IOS v4.2 or a later version). As a
transport option in RAN systems, IP benefits include cost reduction,
deployment flexibility and scalability. 

"As quickly as communication and information networks evolve, IP has
remained a proven foundation for nearly 20 years. This latest technical
report concludes that IP will be a key to the Third Generation
convergence of mobile, Internet and fixed networks," said Dr. Dean
Sirovica, MWIF's founding president and chairman. 

"The WG4 members are to be complimented for their thorough analysis of
IP as an alternative to ATM," added Dr. Sirovica, who is also managing
director of Vodafone's Technology Strategy Group. "Their breakthrough
analysis is an important step toward a single, independent core network
that works with the greatest number of, if not all, access
technologies." 

The WG4 report, which includes technical assessments, applicable IP
stacks, RAN traffic models, and simulation results for IP delay and
performance for several proposed IP stacks, resulted in several
unanimous MWIF conclusions:

- IP in the RAN with careful design is a viable option, in particular,
as it relates to delay and bandwidth efficiency concerns. 

- Simulations conducted by several companies consistently demonstrated
that the IP transport performance is equal or better than the present
transport used in the RAN today. Based on the models described in
MTR-006, IP transport showed approximately 10% improvement over
ATM/AAL2. 

- The bandwidth efficiency improvement of 10% for IP transport over AAL2
transport is a maximum value, which is only achieved over the last hop
when no routing header is applied. 

"Although ATM is a robust architecture for the transport layer in
wireless infrastructures, there are still heavy cost constraints and
maintenance involved in the actual deployment and total cost of
ownership," said Rebecca Diercks director of wireless research for
Cahners In-Stat Group. "As quality of service and reliability improve
with the IP protocol, the industry will continue to see IP built into
the most delay sensitive solutions." 

WG4 is continuing its evaluation of the IP protocol stacks with the goal
of influencing the industry to adopt IP transport in the RAN. The
application of IP may also be considered for other mobile systems,
particularly where sharing of a common transport network between 3G
mobile and other mobile systems might be considered to provide benefits
to operators. 

About Mobile Wireless Internet Forum 

The Mobile Wireless Internet Forum (MWIF) was founded in January 2000,
as a nonprofit mutual benefit corporation under California law. MWIF's
mission is to drive acceptance and adoption of a single mobile wireless
and Internet architecture that is independent of the access technology.
MWIF and its working groups will publish studies, discoveries and
conclusions in future reports. Membership is open to any organization
with an interest in promoting the Forum's mission. Membership
information can be found on the Forum's website at www.mwif.org.