Docsity
Docsity

Prepare for your exams
Prepare for your exams

Study with the several resources on Docsity


Earn points to download
Earn points to download

Earn points by helping other students or get them with a premium plan


Guidelines and tips
Guidelines and tips

Learn Abour Wimax Technology, Lecture notes of Mobile Computing

Subject: Mobile Computing Year: 2025

Typology: Lecture notes

2024/2025

Available from 09/03/2024

ashish-chandak
ashish-chandak 🇮🇳

11 documents

1 / 1

Toggle sidebar

Related documents


Partial preview of the text

Download Learn Abour Wimax Technology and more Lecture notes Mobile Computing in PDF only on Docsity! Introduction to WiMax 1. WiMAX is an IP based, wireless broadband access technology that provides performance similar to 802.11/Wi-Fi networks with the coverage and QOS (quality of service) of cellular networks. 2. WiMAX is an acronym meaning "Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access (WiMAX). 3. WiMAX is developed by an industry consortium, overseen by a group called the WiMAX Forum. The Forum certifies WiMAX equipment to ensure it meets the technology standards. 4. Its technology is based on the IEEE 802.16 set of wide-area communications standards. 5. Wi-MAX is a technology standard for long-range wireless networking. 6. It is optimized for the delivery of IP centric services over a wide area. 7. It provides fixed and mobile Internet access. 8. WiMAX operates similar to WiFi but at higher speeds over greater distances and for a greater number of users. 9. WiMAX has the ability to provide service even in areas that are difficult for wired infrastructure to reach and the ability to overcome the physical limitations of traditional wired infrastructure. 10. WiMAX equipment exists in two basic forms - base stations, installed by service providers to deploy the technology in a coverage area, and receivers, installed in clients. Wi-MAX supports several networking usage models: • a means to transfer data across an Internet service provider network, commonly called backhaul • a form of fixed wireless broadband Internet access, replacing satellite Internet service 11. WiMAX signals can function over a distance of several miles (kilometers) with data rates reaching up to 75 megabits per second (Mb/s). A number of wireless signaling options exist ranging anywhere from the 2 GHz range up to 66 GHz. 12. WiMAX can support voice, video as well as Internet data. 13. WiMAX can potentially be deployed in a variety of spectrum bands: 2.3GHz, 2.5GHz, 3.5GHz, and 5.8GHz 14. WiMAX can help service providers meet many of the challenges they face due to increasing customer demands without discarding their existing infrastructure investments because it has the ability to seamlessly interoperate across various network types. 15. WiMAX can provide wide area coverage and quality of service capabilities for applications ranging from real-time delay-sensitive voice-over-IP (VoIP) to real-time streaming video and non-real-time downloads, ensuring that subscribers obtain the performance they expect for all types of communications. 16. Primarily due to its much higher cost, WiMAX is not a replacement for Wi-Fi home networking or Wi-Fi hotspot technologies.