Our goal is to enable cheap and high-throughput wireless connectivity to moving vehicles in urban areas.
Our goal is to enable cheap and high-throughput wireless connectivity to moving vehicles in urban areas. The available options for such connectivity today fall short in significant ways. Cellular networks are expensive and have low throughput. Same is likely to be true of WiMax networks if they were to become a reality. While some exisiting WiFi basestations can provide opportunistic connectivity to passing vehicles, they are unable to support longer periods of connectivity. However, WiFi deployment is becoming denser and in many cases, entire cities are being covered. But given the short range of WiFi and the presence of many interferring sources, can such deployments enable continuous, cheap, high-throughput connectivity, by themselves or in conjunction with cellular and WiMax networks?
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The map shows the rough locations of our basestations which are spread across five office buildings. In addition to the roads visible on the map, there are some smaller streets on which the vans travel.
Both BSs and clients are small form factor desktops with two WiFi radios. BSs are placed on top floors of the buildings, with their antennae are mounted on the roofs. Low-loss coaxial cables (LMR-900 and LMR-240) connect the radios (inside the desktops) and antennae.
Similarly, the clients are placed inside the vans and their antennae are mounted on the roof. The computers in the van are powered by a dedicated deep cycle battery which powers the computers for about four hours after the van is switched off. This time is used for software updates through a wireless connection with another computer located near the van’s overnight parking space.
Hardware
- EnGenius’ EMP-8602 (opens in new tab) mini PCI modules, which are based on the Atheros 5213 chipset, are used as radios. Their output power is 400 mWat 1Mbps and lower at higher transmission rates. The modules are inserted into the desktop using a mini-PCI to PCI adapter and connected to a U.FL to N Female pigtail.
- HyperLink’s HG2403MGU (opens in new tab) antennae are used for the vans and HGV-2404U (opens in new tab) antennae are used for the basestations. Both types are omnidirectional in the horizontal plane but radiate less energy directly above and below.
- The vans also have GlobalSat’s BU-353 (opens in new tab) GPS unit which is based on the SiRF Star III chipset and outputs data once per second. The uncertainty in the location estimate of this chipset is considered to be under three meters 95% of the time.
- All basestations are connected to Dataprobe’s iBoot (opens in new tab) which is used to kickstart stuck up machines
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- For the IMC 2007 paper
- For the SIGCOMM 2008 paper (opens in new tab)
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- High performance vehicular connectivity using opportunistic erasure coding (opens in new tab) [Usenix ATC 2012]
- Augmenting Mobile 3G using WiFi (opens in new tab) [University of Washington, Seattle]
- Using redundancy to enable interactive connectivity for moving vehicles (opens in new tab) [Keynote at WinMee 2009] [KAIST, Daejeon, South Korea] [MPI-SWS, Saarbrucken, Germany]
- Reliable wireless connectivity on the go (opens in new tab) [MS engineering excellence series]
- Interactive WiFi connectivity for moving vehicles (opens in new tab)[SIGCOMM 2008]
- Understanding WiFi Connectivity from moving vehicles (opens in new tab)[IMC 2007]
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- Software Notebook: Microsoft test-driving Wi-Fi use in vehicles (opens in new tab) [Seattle PI]
- Plan rolling to improve vehicle-based Wi-Fi nets (opens in new tab) [Network World]
- Prepare for truly Mobile WiFi (opens in new tab)[Discover magagize]
- WiFi on the highway (opens in new tab)[Daily Hampshire Gazette]
- Reliable wireless connectivity on the go (opens in new tab)[Onten.net interview]
Personne
Jitu Padhye
Partner Development Lead
Sharad Agarwal
Senior Principal Researcher