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Preface

This book discusses user mobility in a wide area network (WAN) environment. In this discussion, a mobile data device is one which can receive WAN services from essentially any location without requiring any special actions by the user of the device. User mobility is described in the context of the Cellular Digital Packet Data (CDPD) standard, developed by ourselves and others on behalf of the North American cellular industry.

Two trends provide a backdrop for this subject matter. The first of these is the rapid growth of the Internet1. Both in terms of numbers of users and traffic, this growth has been nothing short of phenomenal. What was once strictly the domain of highly technically-literate people has now become headline news. Censorship of the World-Wide Web is now discussed by politicians and URLs are commonly displayed in advertisements.

The popularity of the Internet reflects a change in the media of choice for people wishing to communicate. Email allows the thoughtfulness of a letter while providing the potential immediacy of the telephone. Complex ideas can be conveyed in an organized manner, then further developed by the receiving party. Several rounds of a discussion can take place in a matter of minutes, quickly resolving issues that might be difficult to present orally. The CDPD specification was itself rapidly developed by remote parties largely via Email discussion.

The second trend is that of mobile communications. The cellular industry is experiencing explosive growth, with over 32 million subscribers in North America at year-end 1995. The paging industry has also experienced rapid growth; the advent of new two-way messaging services is likely to extend that growth in the face of competition from low cost (to the subscriber) mobile cellular handsets.

The next step in this evolution of communications is that of mobile data communications. Mobile data is expected to grow from 200 thousand subscribers in 1990 and 1.1 million in mid1995, to 5.2 million subscribers in 2000.2 Several technology developments aimed at mobile data communications are in various stages of progress or completion.

The Mobile IP Task Force of the IETF has been addressing the requirements for mobility in data communications. Their charter is to define the protocols necessary for a correspondent to send and receive data anywhere. The media to be used is unspecified. Presumably one will in the future be able to find an Internet "socket" in the wall of a hotel room as readily as they currently find electrical outlets. However, many "real world" considerations such as usage accounting remain unaddressed by this group.

The Ram and ARDIS mobile data services, supported by RadioMail, provide gateway connections between proprietary radio technology and the Internet or other wide-area networks. However, the need to port applications to nonstandard proprietary mobile devices and APIs limits the generality and user adoption of these service offerings.

Rather than using gateways between proprietary radio technology and the Internet, CDPD defines an open standard which allows mobile devices to be as directly accessible as any other IP host. Standard APIs allow the immediate use of current data applications such as Email on mobile devices. We have done this many times.

This book is intended to complement the CDPD specification but not replace it. Our emphasis is on the data networking aspects of CDPD and its solution to the mobility problem. CDPD is a data network which happens to have an RF-based data link resembling Ethernet (but at a lower speed). The fixed end of the radio link, called the Mobile Data Base Station or MDBS, is little more than a LAN hub from a data networking perspective.

This book is clearly focused on CDPD as the preeminent wide area mobile data solution. We don't apologize for our bias-we were highly involved in the creation of CDPD. However, no system or technology lasts forever; one of our design goal was that CDPD be readily amenable to evolution. CDPD is much more than an airlink-it is an architecture that supports host mobility over a wide area.

The chapters which follow describe the CDPD solution to the challenge of mobility in wide-area networks. A discussion of mobility (of which wirelessness is a special case) is followed by a summary of cellular technology, an overview of CDPD, a description of CDPD architecture and how it supports mobility, a description of security and other support services provided by CDPD (and needed by any public mobile data network!), a survey of other (noncellular) mobile systems and finally, a discussion of future directions in mobility in the wide-area environment. For readers unfamiliar with data networking concepts, a primer on this subject precedes the first chapter.

The target audience for this book is any individual interested in mobile data communications or, more specifically, the rationale behind the design of CDPD. The discussion of technical issues avoids the jargon and abstractions necessary and typical in technical specifications. Because we are not radio engineers, we focus on the system and networking aspects of CDPD rather than the radio technologies, which are better described elsewhere. Our goal is to explain mobility and CDPD in plain English. Please let us know whether we succeeded at mark.taylor@airdata.com, wwaung@direct.ca and mohsen@neda.com.

Bellevue, Washington

June 11, 1996


next up previous contents index
Next: Preliminaries Up: Internetwork Mobility The CDPD Previous: List of Tables