The onward march of the mobile phone continues and, nowadays, it is
frequently easier to reach a business contact by calling the mobile number
rather than by using the fixed-line DDI number. Even though comms managers would
probably like to stop this behaviour, it is becoming a lost cause. People seem
to want to have one voice device and carry it in their pockets or handbags.
This situation is presenting ICT managers with a new problem: how to make
sure that the mobiles work properly within the building. There are many reasons
why mobiles don’t operate too well, such as thick walls and metallic film on
windows.
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There have been several attempts to solve the problem, such as special
antenna systems that pipe the signals from outside to inside. More recently,
very small, low-power GSM base stations have appeared that can be installed in
buildings by the mobile operators.
These are generally called picocells. They have to be integrated tightly into
the mobile networks from spectrum and traffic points of view because the signals
will, of course, leak outside the building and other mobiles will connect when
they can.
None of these solutions are much help to the average ICT manager but it looks
as though hope is on the way in the shape of devices known as femtocells. They
take the process a stage further by reducing a base station to the size and cost
of a top-end Wi-Fi access point. The femtocell is still connected to the mobile
operator’s network but uses a cheap IP connection rather than the leased line
used by a picocell.
This technology is particularly suited to 3G networks because they typically
run all the base stations on the same frequency. Femtocells could use a
different frequency, which would make it less likely that a passing mobile would
connect to the femtocell.
There are many benefits in having a 3G femtocell network within a building,
particularly when data services are considered. Staff who use 3G data cards when
on the move could use them in the office without breaking the bank because it is
expected that owners of femtocells would have special deals with the mobile
operators for traffic carried over the femtocells. Also, the battery life of 3G
mobiles would be increased because their power levels would be reduced when
close to a femtocell.
ABI Research forecasts that there will be 32 million femtocells in use by
2011. In the UK, there are two suppliers,
ip.access and
Ubiquisys. In the first move by the big
boys, Nokia Siemens Networks and
Thomson recently announced a femtocell and a network gateway with shipments due
in 2008.
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