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LTE: Driving Data Through the Airwaves

Oct. 20, 2015
Stefano Moioli, Director of Product Management, Cellular, at u-blox, examines emerging business models for LTE-based services and applications
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Stefano Moioli, Director Product Management, Cellular, u-blox

Ours is an increasingly data-driven world, a long way from the one envisaged by the developers of the first wireless networks. Those early networks were all about enabling voice calls on the move—with maybe a text (SMS) message or two being sent. The early SMSs gave their senders a taste for more.

The next-generation technology, dubbed LTE (Long Term Evolution), uses a different part of the radio spectrum from its predecessors and is operable over a wide range of frequency bands. It’s also designed to operate on a network architecture that uses the IP (Internet Protocol) system. It should be noted that LTE itself is not, strictly speaking, a fourth- generation (4G) technology. That is the domain of its successor, LTE Advanced.

IP addresses are what will reference each device in the Internet of Things (IoT), which is widely believed to represent the future of computing, bringing together a number of technologies. It’s expected that billions of devices with embedded intelligence will be connected to the Internet by 2020. Because of their intelligence, control of the devices from remote locations will be possible using a variety of communications technologies.

LTE represents one of the technology strands that will converge to deliver IoT. It offers much higher download and upload speeds in comparison with 3G technology, as well as lower data-transfer latency and better support for mobility.

Depending on the frequency band being used, the technology can support terminals moving at up to 500 km per hour (310 miles per hour). This makes it eminently suitable for a wide range of services in the machine-to-machine (M2M) sector, using a small LTE data modem such as those available from u-blox. In addition, the technology’s ability to support variable cell sizes—anything from tens of meters up to 100 km (62 miles)—suits it for an extended range of situations and environments.

Information at Users’ Fingertips

Some of these services are already available, but can be delivered faster or better than has been possible up to now. Others are driven by the increased speed or packet size available with LTE.

In the automotive arena, LTE already provided car passengers with all of the voice, video, Internet access, and social-media services they need. The “infotainment” offering can be further developed, though; for example, through integration with vehicle navigation systems to provide fuller, video-rich information about local points of interest or services available. It’s likely that cars in the near future will be fitted with an LTE router, or an adapter capable of turning a mobile phone into a Wi-Fi hotspot, in order to offer this type of service.

The same type of approach could be taken in more general applications. For instance, shoppers or tourists could be given more information about the area in which they’re located, or provide extra information to those attending a sporting event or mass rally. Interactive video, coupled with information from Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) units, could offer new social-media services such as proximity dating—identifying and finding potential partners at near-by locations.

Another area of mass deployment that’s already under development is remote healthcare: Providing care to patients using terminals fitted in their homes. This gives them direct access to healthcare professionals, and can be used to provide diagnostic information as well as monitor chronic conditions such as diabetes and heart disease. In common with the automotive application, LTE is important in enabling data-rich video links to be established—in this case, with private or public healthcare organizations as well as in assisted-living applications.

Video, Wherever and Whenever

The ability to provide data-hungry video solutions is an important aspect of LTE over its predecessors, which were essentially telephony systems with limited data capability.  Renewable energy can be used to provide power in off-grid locations. This extends the reach of data- or video-based activities into areas that would previously have been unavailable, opening up possibilities for applications such as remote surveillance or video monitoring.

LTE will allow video to be streamed from hostile or remote environments—possibly using robots to capture and send back data. This could provide a highly cost-effective means of monitoring a variety of locations, such as warehouses, healthcare facilities, factories, retail outlets, and other residential, commercial, or industrial locations.

The ability to transmit large volumes of data will make it feasible to site some types of business in low-cost locations. Communication between the locations can take place via video link rather than using conventional or mobile telephony.

LTE in the Danger Zone

Another potential benefit derived from LTE is its ability to send video and high volumes of data, coupled with off-grid electricity supplied through renewable sources, upon the occurrence of a natural disaster. Communications can be restored rapidly to areas that have lost conventional telephony—providing, of course, that personnel are able to reach the disaster zone (always the stumbling block in such a scenario).

In this situation, drones could carry out aerial mapping and LTE-based cameras could assess buildings for damage. They could equally be used for search-and-rescue operations, as well as in less perilous environments such as surveying, crowd and traffic monitoring, aerial photography, and utilities.

Because of its extensive data-handling capacity, LTE, in conjunction with cameras, can be utilized at security checkpoints, such as airports, to transmit scanned images of travellers’ faces and send them to a database for matching purposes. This will allow passengers to be identified quickly and authorized for travel.

For other travellers, it’s likely that LTE could be used to replace the traditional billboard with digital signage units. There would be no need for the ladder, glue pot, and large piece of paper. Roadside signs could be changed a number of times a day and tailored to suit the passing traffic.

LTE’s ability to carry video-rich multimedia messaging as well as tapping in to or providing new social-media services could be used to enliven vending-machine sites and enrich the lives of those using them. Coca-Cola has already experimented with this by networking its machines. Users of a specially created app would then be able to offer a Coke to someone they’ve never even met, who could be on the other side of the world.

From Split-Second Timing to Grass Roots

For more time-critical applications—traffic control, collision avoidance, financial transactions—LTE’s low latency (a few milliseconds) will enable it to make the difference in situations that require split-second reaction. At what could be considered the other end of the scale, returning to the telephony-based roots of its ancestry, LTE can replace the physical connection to homes and businesses—the so-called “last mile connection””—with a wireless connection to a Wi-Fi router.

LTE’s capability can go as far as the operator’s or service provider’s imagination. With the requisite infrastructure in place, and equipped with a low-cost wireless modem, any previously standalone machine can be connected into a local or global network, becoming a fully functioning, location-aware device that can reside in the Internet of Things.

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