13

Wireless Core Network Hardware

13.1 The Need to Reduce End-to-End Delivery Cost

In Chapter 12 we suggested a brave new world in which telecom networks including mobile broadband networks would deliver social, political, intellectual, economic and possibly environmental value. However, this can only be achieved if the networks are financially sustainable.

This might seem back to front, but in Chapter 21 we review a series of forecasts including our own that suggest that one consequence of the transition from telecom networks to information networks is that there will be a 30-fold increase in data volume over the next five years over mobile broadband networks and a threefold increase in value.

This implies a substantial need to reduce end-to-end delivery cost. Backhaul costs presently represent 30% of this cost but are increasing over time. This cost of delivery is not just a function of volume but is also influenced by traffic mix and the degree of multiplexing gain that can be achieved.

13.1.1 Multiplexing Gain

Multiplexing gain is a function of single users having variable bit rate requirements that are then averaged over multiple users. Some of the bits are not latency sensitive and can be buffered. Additionally, there may be more than one point-to-point routing option that provides additional multiplexing gain. Mobile broadband offered traffic is highly asynchronous (bursty).

On the one hand, it could be argued that this makes multiplexing more rather than less effective. ...

Get Making Telecoms Work: From Technical Innovation to Commercial Success now with the O’Reilly learning platform.

O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.