Friday, January 16, 2015

Net Neutrality – Get ready for an Interesting Year at the FCC

Net Neutrality – Get ready for an Interesting Year at the FCC

BY ERNEST WORTHMAN –

January 13, 2015 — The number one issue for 2015 is net neutrality (NN). This is gearing up for a super slugfest. The 800 pound gorillas, like AT&T, Verizon, Comcast, Cox, etc. who have been lining the pockets of the Republicans, forever, so they can keep their slice of the golden fleece, golden, are bring out the big guns in this issue. They have already been admonished for throttling. And if the FCC puts them under Title II, they will no longer will they be able to favor sites with a preferential “fast lane” that sites pay premiums for. Hmmm…a level playing field; that is a novel idea.
In favor of NN, are a majority of Democrats, and most consumer advocates and the smaller players like NetFlix and Etsy. Their argument is that net neutrality offered all website players a level playing field, offering the consumer the same value proposition across the board. The Republicans, and the telecoms, on the other hand, claim that it would hinder innovation.
However, it isn’t just about the Dems and the Repubs. There are perceptions at play here. First of all, much of the consumer sees the telecom giants as bad guys. Businesses who are constantly getting dinged for “ripping” off the consumer (hidden charges, data throttling, murky contracts, etc.) so they already have a bit of a black eye, even if they have a legitimate position. Second, there is the issue of big brother again, meddling in something that, for the most part, is working pretty well. And, finally, much of the public really doesn’t care one way of the other, as long as they can stream Mad Men to five different devices, listen to The Who, Live at the Isle of Wight Festival 1970 and play their MMO game, World of Warcraft, simultaneously.
And, there is still another player – Google. In a recent filing with the FCC, they stated that they see a silver lining in being regulated as a telecom company. As a regulated telecom service, Google Fiber would get access to utility poles and other essential infrastructure owned by utilities, just as the telecoms have had since the beginning of time. They would like to see this happen because it would promote competition and spur more investment and deployment of broadband Internet services – and provide a potential backhaul bonanza for small cell deployments, which, currently suffer from lack of ubiquitous, high-bandwidth backhaul services. Pole access is fundamental and if Title II gives Google pole access, then it might really rock the world with broadband access – good for small cells.
In the end, this is really more of a Washington power play. The Republicans, with their new-found power in Washington are just looking for ways to flex their political muscle, and this, along with Obamacare, are highly visible targets. In retrospect, NN is a good thing and the playing field should be level. And it will bode well for the small cell industry.

Thursday, January 15, 2015

People Are Building Their Own Cellular Network

Where Cellular Networks Don’t Exist, People Are Building Their Own



Caption TK here
It took two hours in the rain to anchor the tower to the roof of Yaee’s town hall.  Lizzie Wade
Inside the cloud that is perpetually draped over the small town of San Juan Yaee, Oaxaca, Raúl Hernández Santiago crouches down on the roof of the town hall and starts drilling. Men wearing rain gear of various impermeabilities cluster above him, holding a 4-meter-tall tower in place. Braided wires trail from four small circles welded near its midpoint; eventually those will be bolted or tied down in order to hold the tower steady during the frequent storms that roll through this part of Mexico’s Sierra Juárez mountains. They don’t want it falling over every time it rains. Ninety thousand of the town’s pesos—a bit over $6,000—are invested in the equipment lashed to the top of the tower, in a town where many residents get by on subsistence agriculture.
The tower—which Hernández, Yaee’s blacksmith, welded together out of scrap metal just a few hours earlier—is the backbone of Yaee’s first cellular network. The 90,000 pesos come in the form of two antennas and an open-source base station from a Canadian company called NuRAN. Once Hernández and company get the tower installed and the network online, Yaee’s 500 citizens will, for the first time, be able to make cell phone calls from home, and for cheaper rates than almost anywhere else in Mexico.
Raúl Hernandez and Peter Bloom.
Rhizomatica’s Peter Bloom helped make sure the tower could support a base station and an antenna.  Lizzie Wade
Strategically ignored by Mexico’s major telecoms, Yaee is putting itself on the mobile communications grid with the help of a Oaxaca-based telecommunications non-profit calledRhizomatica. Its founder, Peter Bloom, is among the men currently getting soaked on the roof of town hall. It’s May of 2014, and this is the third of what he jokingly calls “artisanal cell phone installations” that he’s led in the Sierra Juárez in the past year and a half—the first of their kind in the world.
By the end of the year, he will have installed six more networks all over the state of Oaxaca, bringing the total to nine. Armed with an experimental concession from the Mexican government that grants Rhizomatica access to coveted cellular spectrum all over the country, Bloom is slowly but surely bringing coverage to towns that have been left out of the 21st century’s most important technological revolution.

Too small for profit

Of the world’s 7 billion or so cell phones, a few hundred of them are already in Yaee—they’re just not connected to a network. Kids use them as cameras and mp3 players, and Hernández, like many adults, bought his to use in Oaxaca City, a seven-hour bus ride away. When he’s there, his cell phone can connect to plenty of base stations, which, in turn, link him to his choice of commercial network. But back in Yaee, there are no base stations and therefore no network. Every time Hernández wants to make a call in his hometown, he hikes for 20 minutes to the top of the highest hill around and hopes to catch some signal trickling in from a faraway base station, installed in a place deemed more profitable for telecoms than small towns like Yaee.
Raúl Hernandez.
Raúl Hernández, el herrero de Yaee, construyó en su taller la torre hecha de chatarra.  Lizzie Wade
We’ve all heard plenty of uplifting stories of the democratizing potential of cell phones, how they’ve brought everything from voice calls to mobile banking to people who have never had access to landlines and laptops. Cell phones “have definitely proven the most ubiquitous piece of communication and digital hardware that people own on earth,” says Bloom. But on its own, “your cell phone doesn’t really know how to do anything,” he explains. All of the utility is in the network. And by and large, that network is provided—and, therefore, controlled—by a company that wants to make a profit.
That profit comes from subscribers, and if there aren’t enough of them in a particular region, cellular providers simply refuse to install their infrastructure there. Some countries get around that economic reality by legally requiring telecom companies to build networks in rural areas, no matter how many people end up paying for a contract. Mexico doesn’t have any such laws, meaning that Yaee, with its 500 residents, doesn’t stand a chance of attracting a commercial provider.
To make things worse, Mexico’s telecom industry is largely controlled by Telmex, a near-monopoly run by Carlos Slim. Ever since a supposed reform in the late 1980s transferred the country’s state telecom into Slim’s hands, Mexicans have paid first world rates for third world service—first for landlines, and now for cell service and internet access. And that’s when they live in a place with a network. Limited access and high prices meant that only 55 percent of Mexicans were using cell phones in 2011, according to the International Telecommunication Union.
Despite Mexico’s reputation for horrendous, Slim-driven telecom service and policy, it’s far from the only country that struggles with providing rural cell phone access. According to the GSM (for Global System for Mobile Communications, the standard technology behind a 2G network) Association, a consortium of commercial mobile providers from all over the world, 1.6 billion people in rural parts of developing countries don’t have access to mobile networks. That’s why Bloom and his collaborators at Rhizomatica say that if you really want to make the benefits of cell phones available to the people who need them most, it’s not enough to democratize the hardware by making the phones themselves super cheap. You have to democratize the infrastructure, the network itself. And that’s a lot harder to do.

Democratizing technology

From a hacker’s point of view, mobile communications came along at just the wrong time. The first commercial systems were deployed in 1991, right before the internet emerged from the academy and started making its way into people’s homes. By the time a strong open source community came into being, cellular networks were locked up behind walls upon walls of patents and proprietary equipment. Even today, “it’s very difficult to get your hands on the technology,” says Harald Welte, an open and free source software developer in Germany who works on mobile communications.
It wasn’t until around 2006 that old base stations started showing up on eBay, giving interested hackers like Welte a firsthand look inside the (albeit already outdated) technology that made 2G mobile networks possible. Out of straightforward intellectual curiosity, Welte snapped up a few and, four years later, he was able to make the first call on his reverse-engineered, open source network, dubbed Open BSC, referring to the base station controllers that coordinate traffic on a cell network.
Now, Rhizomatica is pushing Open BSC to its limits out in the real world. “We’re amongst the first people actually putting it into a live environment and using the shit out of it,” Bloom says. He first got interested in community cell networks when he was living in Nigeria and working with communities that were protesting the presence of oil companies in the Niger Delta. The activists there had cell phones, but thanks to the high cost of service—not to mention political forces that could monitor their communications or even shut down their network on a whim—it was difficult for them to share information with each other or with larger audiences. So Bloom decided to help them build what’s called a mobile mesh network, which connects cell phones directly to each other instead of routing calls through base stations or commercial networks. But the technology, which is mainly used in disaster relief situations like post-earthquake Haiti, proved to be too unreliable for everyday use. Sustained, real-world levels of traffic overloaded them, and the mesh networks frequently collapsed.
WHEN A LOCAL MAN SUFFERED SEVERAL SERIOUS SNAKEBITES AND NEEDED ANTIVENOM RIGHT AWAY, THERE WAS NO SIGNAL.
A few years later, Bloom moved to Mexico to be with his now wife, who works with community radio stations in the Sierra Juárez. These villages wanted but couldn’t afford commercial cell service, and Bloom started thinking about a way to continue the project he had started in Nigeria. He decided to ditch the mesh network idea and went on the hunt for serious telecom technology, ultimately settling on Welte’s Open BSC as the strongest open source system. But since Bloom’s background isn’t in programming, he needed help installing the software on open source base stations he buys from NuRAN and another company called Fairwaves. He started enlisting the help of any experienced hacker who happened to pass through Oaxaca City on backpacking trips and the like. (One of them, an Italian, would eventually move to Mexico permanently to be part of the Rhizomatica team.) Today, Bloom spends much of his time personally driving the equipment out to villages like Yaee, getting soaked on as many roofs as he needs to in order to get the networks up and running.
The communities pay 120,000 pesos ($8,000 dollars) upfront for the equipment and installation, about one-sixth of what the commercial provider Movistar charges for a similar rural installation. Ninety thousand of the pesos go to buy the hardware, and the rest covers Rhizomatica’s time and expenses. Subscribers to the community network pay 30 pesos (about $2) per month for all local calls and texts, and the town keeps any profit left over after paying for electricity and maintenance. Thanks to a Mexican company called Protokol, which provides internet access all over rural Oaxaca, Rhizomatica can also hook up the town’s network to a voice-over-IP connection, which allows users to make very cheap long-distance calls to Mexico City and even the US, where many people have relatives. Once the network is installed, Yaee’s residents will be able to call the U.S. for 20 centavos (less than 2 pennies) per minute. A similar call from one of the town’s public landlines runs 15 pesos (about $1) per minute, a prohibitive cost for many residents.
Still, commercial networks have “20 years of headway” over the open source approach, Welte says, and Rhizomatica’s community networks can suffer from their distinct DIY feel. Bloom, Hernández, and the rest of the team must make sure to install Yaee’s tower above one of the town hall’s windows, so they can run an extension cord through it and plug the base station into a wall socket. That means whenever the power goes out in Yaee—which happens frequently, especially during the May-to-September rainy season—they lose the cell network, too. And until the town could raise enough money to move the entire installation to higher ground than the town hall’s roof (which happened in August 2014, three months later), there was no guarantee that Rhizomatica’s signal would be able to reach up the hillside to where Hernández and a good portion of Yaee’s residents live.
It’s this fundamental instability that causes the most frustration for users in towns that have had their community networks up and running for longer. In Yaviche, a similar sized town on the other side of the mountain from Yaee that installed its local network in September of 2013, Abi Martínez Ramos serves as the rural doctor and says that having any cell service at all has been a boon for emergency medicine. But when a local man suffered several serious snakebites and needed antivenom right away, “there was no signal,” he remembers. Someone had to physically find Martínez to administer treatment, just like in the old days.
Back in Yaee, it takes the team about 2 hours out in the rain to anchor the tower to the roof. But it turns out the rain has caused a more serious problem than merely soaking everyone to the bone. Three cloudy days in a row have depleted the solar panels that power Protokol’s repeater antennas, knocking out Yaee’s internet access. With no internet, Bloom and his tech team can’t get the network online. They make plans to come back the following week to finish the job.
DSC00651
Raúl Hernández Santiago and Peter Bloom helped install the first cell phone tower in the town of San Juan Yaee, Oaxaca.  Lizzie Wade
Despite its problems, an increasing number of communities in Oaxaca are eager to be part of Rhizomatica’s experiment, attracted by the low price and the promise of complete control over their networks. Keyla Mesulemeth Ramírez, who helps run the community network in Talea de Castro, a town of 2,000 that volunteered to be a Rhizomatica pilot project in the spring of 2013, fields one such inquiry in her office the day before the Yaee installation. Four men from a town called Yalahui have heard Bloom is in the area and they want to talk to him about installing a network in their village. They grow coffee, sugar cane, corn, and beans, and they’re tired of not being able to call home when they’re out in the fields. It’s annoying not to be able to call when you’ve forgotten your lunch, they say, but it’s downright dangerous when someone has an accident and needs help. Plus, everyone in Yalahui has family in Mexico City and the US, and they want to be able to call them without worrying about how much it costs. They’ve driven for 5 hours to talk to Bloom about a possible solution.
Mesulemeth is frank with the Yalahui men about the cost of the installation and Rhizomatica’s waiting list. But she’s sympathetic to their frustration of being left off the cellular grid. “Before, cell phone service was a luxury,” she tells them. “Now it’s a necessity.” She promises to put them in touch with Peter, who finds the group lingering over lunch a few hours later. He goes over the costs again, and says he’ll get out to Yalahui as soon as he can. Three months later, they’re making calls on a brand new network all their own.

Thursday, January 8, 2015

Connecting Remote Islands

Connecting Remote Islands

Thousands of small, hard-to-reach islands are in need of affordable telecommunication services. These are islands with small population, no or unreliable electrical grid, huge infrastructure limitations and low levels of income.

Major Bottlenecks:

The major challenges by any service provider to reach these remote islands for mobile communication services are:
  • Limited size – 2,000 or less inhabitants
  • Low income group
  • Geographical dislocation
  • Proneness to natural hazards
  • No or unreliable grid electricity
  • Limited infrastructure

Omoco for Remote Islands:

OMOCO platform delivers affordable mobile connectivity to millions of such people living in these islands and connect them to the capital of the country (Mainland) and further to rest of the world.
OMOCO all-IP approach enables quick integration with satellite service providers offering backhaul connectivity to the service provider’s network in mainland. The advantages of connectivity to these remote islands and mobile communication at the hands of inhabitants are manifold.

Enterprise & In-building


Why Omoco as an Enterprise GSM and In-Building Telecom Solution?

Wireless users spend more than 80% of their time indoors – inside buildings – be it offices, corporate parks, shopping malls, residential townships etc. Existing in-building coverage solutions are costly to deploy and difficult to install. When coverage is provided via outdoor base stations, issues are observed related to user experiences. Large campuses may have many such high rise buildings spread across different geographical locations.

How Can Omoco Help?

Omoco enables owners of these buildings/organizations setting up quick and cost effective private mobile network. The box, when deployed, can also interface with cost effective enterprise PBX, VoIP operators/MNO to extend the communication to the outside world.
Single Omoco Box has sufficient RF power output to feed DAS for up to 8 floors of approx 10,000 sq ft each.
Also, Omoco is one telecom solution that enables connecting multiple locations using enterprise IP network, allowing a multi-location private mobile network and mobile office.

A Perfect Enterprise & In-Building Telecom Solution:

  • Unified platform for GSM services
  • Small and highly integrated - Easy to carry GSM network
  • Local voice offload
  • Interworking with existing enterprise / service provider infrastructure
  • Connect to multiple service providers (VoIP, PLMN)
  • Scalable architecture (Encompass multiple locations)
  • Multi-location enterprise network
  • Guaranteed coverage and capacity
  • Multiple backhaul connectivity options – radio, fiber and satellite for remote industries
  • Choice of handset
  • Superior coverage than DECT
  • Quick deployment
  • Managed by IT

Monday, January 5, 2015

The Low Cost GSM Network is Here

The Low Cost GSM Network is Here


This post takes a look at custom hardware that can be used with open source GSM network software to enable the creation of extremely low cost mobile network infrastructure.
In October it will be two years since I wrote about the opening up of GSM via open source implementations of key technology, development of which has continued since then with many new features being added to software and a growing number of real world installations. In addition to which there are now three custom hardware platforms that support the software.
Open source
In that post from 2010 I mention in brief two open source infrastructure projects,OpenBTS and OpenBSC. The former implements a GSM base station or “BTS” transceiver as a software-defined radio (SDR), along with all the other functionality required that when combined with the Asterisk IP telephony switch enables GSM handsets to be turned into SIP (Voice-over-IP) endpoints.
The OpenBSC project is equally as impressive and provides software that can be used as a traditional GSM switching centre (BSC) and integrated into an existing mobile network, or alternatively can be combined with BTS hardware and configured as a “GSM network in a box”.
The above is something of a simplification and does not do justice to the projects, and for further details see their websites or an introductory article that I wrote for The H.
Early hardware support
Initial hardware support for OpenBTS was provided via the Universal Software Radio Peripheral (USRP), a modular and highly flexible companion to the open source SDR platform, GNU Radio.
OpenBSC started life as a GSM infrastructure research project and has since developed into something that is finding use in commercial networks. Most development work to date has made use of surplus BTS hardware, and this was really the only option available to greenfield network deployments which, not surprisingly, has proved problematic.
Custom hardware
The first purpose built hardware for OpenBTS came from the project sponsors,Range Networks, who provide turnkey development hardware which at the time of writing is priced at $4,995. With more substantial hardware options that are aimed at commercial deployments and that are P.O.A.
title
Prototype UmTRX hardware (UmTRX Project, CC BY-SA 3.0)
A Russian company called Fairwaves have been working on an open source hardware platform for OpenBTS that is called UmTRX. With the schematics and BoM published under a Creative Commons licence and FPGA firmware and driver code published under the GPL. Pricing for the UmTRX has not been announced as yet, but given that it's described as being “budget-friendly” and USRP and Range Networks options for OpenBTS already exist, it's likely that this is going to be competitive.
title
The sysmoBTS (© systems for mobile communication Gmbh) 
In realising that the ongoing success of OpenBSC in commercial deployments depended upon securing the availability of affordable BTS hardware, German company sysmocom developed the sysmoBTS product. While this is not open source hardware, the BTS firmware is at the very least in part open source, and it's also possible to run OpenBSC on the same hardware in order to create a single box turnkey solution. Pricing for the sysmoBTS is available on application, but some have suggested the single unit price to be circa 2,000-2,500 Euro.
Conclusion
It's still reasonably early days but OpenBTS and OpenBSC seem to be following the typical open source technology adoption curve, where initial use is primarily in research, by enthusiasts and communities with limited budgets, and by a small but growing number of forward thinking companies that are keen to shrink their operating cost base.
The emergence of custom hardware will lend support to the development of OpenBTS and OpenBSC whilst also enabling more widespread adoption, and is almost certainly a sign of things to come. For most of its life GSM technology has been off-limits to open innovation, but this is rapidly changing and it may just be that the projects covered here have sown the seeds for the disruption of the mobile network equipment provider industry.

Saturday, January 3, 2015

Build Your Own Cellular Network

Build Your Own Cellular Network

just about anybody can create an inexpensive cellular base station that routes calls all over the world.

By Erica Naone on April 20, 2010




The task of running a cellular network has usually been reserved for major carriers. But now an open-source project called OpenBTS is proving that almost anyone can cheaply run a network with parts from a home-­supply or auto-supply store. Cell-phone users within such a network can place calls to each other and–if the network is connected to the Internet–to people anywhere in the world.

The project’s cofounder, David Burgess, hopes that OpenBTS will mean easier and cheaper access to cellular service in remote parts of the world, including hard-to-reach locations like oil rigs and poor areas without much infrastructure. OpenBTS has already been used for cellular service at the Burning Man festival in the Black Rock Desert of Nevada and on the island of Niue in the South Pacific, among other locations.

a. universal software radio peripheral
A relatively inexpensive piece of hardware, easily purchased online, can be tuned to provide various types of radio signals. Someone running an OpenBTS network would use it to send and receive radio transmissions between the base station and a user’s cell phone.

asterisk software
A typical GSM base station, Burgess says, can’t do anything without a suite of components that maintain databases, perform call-­switching functions, and so forth. This infrastructure is expensive (typically around $250,000) and complicated to configure, and it needs to be stored in an air-conditioned room. Obviously, that’s impractical in the kinds of places ­OpenBTS is designed for. As a result, the system replaces much of the physical infrastructure of the core network with VoIP software–in this case, an open-source program called Asterisk that can be installed on any off-the-shelf PC.

IP Connection
Cell-phone users on an OpenBTS network can reach each other even if the system isn’t connected to the Internet, but reaching someone outside the network requires an Internet connection. On Niue, the group used five-gigahertz IP radios to link the BTS unit to Telecom Niue’s wired Internet infrastructure, four kilometers away. Burgess says that response time can get a bit sluggish if the Internet connection isn’t very good, but it doesn’t take much bandwidth to make the system functional.

power supply
The system deployed on Niue draws about 60 watts of power, supplied by three marine batteries of the type that many locals use on their boats. Because the system’s power requirements are so low, Burgess says, a base station could also run on solar or wind power.

gsm handset
OpenBTS re-creates the technology behind GSM (the global system for mobile communications), which is used by the majority of mobile phones in the world. Any GSM phone will “see” an OpenBTS network as a standard cell network and interact with it normally.

antenna
Like any cell network, an OpenBTS system requires an antenna to facilitate signaling. Different types of antennas can be used, according to the range the operator wants the network to have.

Friday, January 2, 2015

Clarity Network Architechture



The Municipality of Zaanstad supports “The New Way of Working” with private GSM network and IP telephony


The Municipality of Zaanstad supports “The New Way of Working” with privateGSM network and IP telephony

Summary:--

Following an extensive public tender, the municipality of Zaanstad selected Dimension Data to
supply an innovative Private GSM network and Avaya IP telephony environment. These solutions were required because Zaanstad was having a new town hall constructed where almost all of its services were brought together, whereas previously employees were working at three different locations. Together with opting for a new town hall at one location, Zaanstad also chose
the New Way of Working. This new and flexible office concept enables the majority of staff
members to work independently of location, inside and outside the new building. Thanks to the
new and innovative Dimension Data telephony environment, they can be reached throughout
the entire building by their smartphone. And thanks to the Private GSM technology installed,
the reachability and cover in and around the new town hall are first rate. 

Business challenge:-

In view of establishing a new town hall, the Zaanstad municipality chose a telephony environment that supports the New Way of Working. The municipality introduced this concept in order to work both more effectively and more efficiently, and with the New Way of Working the majority
of staff do not have a fixed workspace.On arrival, employees themselves look for somewhere to work. Only Customer Contact Centre and secretarial staff have landlines at their disposal. When the new town hall went into operation, the rest of the staff could choose from various types of smartphones. 

Solution delivered:-

Dimension Data designed and built a private GSM network that has been fully integrated with an IP-telephony based IPcommunication platform. This integration makes broad Unified Communications functionality available on employees’ smartphones. For mobile communication outside the building, the municipality entered into a contract with Mobile Virtual Network Integrator Private Mobility, which connected the private GSM network to Vodafone’s public mobile network. This means that even outside the building, part of the employees are still available on their fixed phone number.
A component of the IP telephony solution is an Avaya Aura contact centre that handles all incoming calls to the central 14075 number. 14075 is the municipality’s
general number that citizens can use for any questions they have. Dimension
Data based the private GSM network on Quortus technology.

The result:-

The Zaanstad municipality boasts a telephony environment that provides reliable and flawless communication by means of an internal GSM network. Employees who are often working
outside the building – and who have to be available – are able to roam between the private GSM network and the public network without any problem. However, this is not the only major advantage of GSM. This approach ensures a robust environment, whereby fewer access points are needed than with a DECT or WiFi network. With a Private GSM environment, employees experience the benefits of proven GSM technology, yet they are not dependent on the public GSM network, over which the municipality has no control, and which can become overloaded.

The solution:-
Delivery and implementation of the Private GSM and IP telecommunication infrastructure              (according to planning and within budget).
Maintenance: 24x7 Uptime, so that Zaanstad’s provision of services is guaranteed at all                  times.

Value derived:-

Employees work with a smartphone of their choice. Based on Choose Your Own
         Device, there is a choice from iOS (Apple iPhone) or Android (HTC or Samsung).
Employees who also work outside the town hall and who must be available roam without any            problems between the private GSM network and the national mobile network.
The private GSM network offers better coverage throughout the building with
         fewer access points than DECT or WiFi.
Increased availability, since employees do not depend on public GSM networks and
        are thus at less risk of poor availability due, for instance, to the public network overloading.