Intel Technology - Docbox
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Intel Technology - Docbox
Successful User Deployments Means: Choice, Confidence, Flexibility Walt Brown – [email protected] Intel Communications Infrastructure Group NGN@Home, ETSI, Sophia, April 2005 www.intel.com Draft Version Same Same Old Old Computer Computer and and Phone Phone in in the the Same Same Old Old Places Places 2 www.intel.com Draft Version All These New Gadgets and Paradigms! 3 www.intel.com Draft Version And in Lots of New Places! 4 www.intel.com Draft Version And So Many New Providers! Von Feb05 5 www.intel.com Draft Version Lots of New Services! “OnStar*” “OnStar*” Read Readaa Magazine Magazine Directions Directions Get GetHelp Help Have Haveaa Meeting Meeting Push Pushto to Talk Talk Surf Surfthe the Web Web Get Getthe the News News Buy Buy Tickets Tickets Translate Translate Check Checkaa Schedule Schedule Talk Talkto to the Kids the Kids Instant Instant Message Message E-Mail E-Mail Get Get Medicine Medicine 6 Get GetCool Cool Ringtones Ringtones www.intel.com Draft Version Call CallFire Fire Truck Truck Erkki Liikanen Former European Commissioner responsible for Enterprise and Information Society “We should aim for all citizens to be able to use electronic communications, whether they have less digital skills, are living in remote regions, have less income, or have special physical or mental needs. Everyone should share the benefits of the Information Society in terms of access to services and of greater choice, lower prices and higher quality.” ESO Conference, 2003 7 www.intel.com Draft Version Digital Home Product Sales Projections 8 www.intel.com Draft Version Connected Connected Products Products Linksys Digital Media Station Apex Networked DVD Gateway with Wireless 802.11b DVD SMC Universal Wireless Multimedia Philips Digital Media Receiver D-Link DSM-320 Wireless – B Media link For music WML11B HP Digital Media Receiver iCube Play@TV TiVo Home Media Option Sound Blaster Wireless Music Netgear MP101 Rockford OmniFi Hauppauge Examples only, actual companies/services TBD 9 PrismIQ Player GlooLabs HomePod Sony RoomLink GoVideo D2730 Networked DVD Roku HD 1000 Pinnacle Show Center *Other names and brands may be claimed as the property of others www.intel.com Draft Version Mobility & Wireless Vision HOT SPOTS WORK HOME WLAN Intelligent, Reconfigurable Clients Public Networks/ Internet Converged services WPAN OUTDOORS WWAN Seamless access to all networks, apps, & services 10 Cell PUBLIC TRANSPORT www.intel.com Draft Version RURAL AUTO Digital Home is a content manager built around me BROADBAND Entertainment, E-Business, Services Wireless Content, Services MEDIA Pre-Recorded Content Personal Media BROADCAST Services, Entertainment Goal Delivering Personalized Content to any device, mobile or in the home Intel Perspective Powerful client devices drive xSP growth through new data services ’04-’08 Deployment Plan Mainstream users in all geographies; the digital evolution continues with mobility, personalization and interoperability Scope Affordable media platforms for personal environment, mobile, home, office 11 www.intel.com Draft Version What Do People Do? Talk to each other Discover Look for easier ways to do things Play Work Study Move around Keep track of things Buy stuff Eat Sleep Get help Go to conferences 12 www.intel.com Draft Version Change Gears “Pay no attention to that man behind the curtain!” IMS Support 13 www.intel.com Draft Version IMS “Behind the scenes” Parlay/OSA SIP 3rd Party Content & Applications Home Subscriber Server (HSS) Network Data Center Network Infrastucture Application Server Convergent Charging Collector Call Servers (S,P,I-CSCF) SS7 Signal Gateway Media GW Multi-Ser vice Provisioning Platform Network Gateway Access Control BRAS SSP SIP/H.323 DSLAM Access Points WLAN Access (WiFi, WiMAX) (e.g. cable, xDSL) 14 SIP SIP/H.323 Pocket Mobile Corporate Access (for voice inter-working) Broadband Wireline Radio Access Control Converged Access Router/IPPBX CMTS PSTN/CS PLMN Media Server GGSN/PDSN Media GW Controller Clients Network Gateway IMS IT Data Center Network & Service Mgmt www.intel.com Draft Version (GPRS, EDGE, UMTS. HSPDA, CDMA 1x, CDMA EV…) What is IMS about? Enhanced Services (Color Ring Back, Push to Talk, UM, UComms, Presence, Video, …) IP Only Interface w/SIP PSTN Wireless Basic Services Basic Services Wireline Basic Services (CallerID, VMail, Xfer, Conferencing) (CallerID, VMail, Xfer, Conferencing) (CallerID, VMail, Xfer, Conferencing) Infrastructure Infrastructure Infrastructure (Switching, MultiMedia, …) (Switching, MultiMedia, …) 15 www.intel.com Draft Version (Switching, MultiMedia, …) What is IMS about? Enhanced Services (Color Ring Back, Push to Talk, UM, UComms, Presence, Video, …) Basic Services Network Infrastructur e IP Only Interface w/SIP PSTN Infrastructure Wireline Infrastructure Infrastructure (Switching, MultiMedia, …) Clients (Switching, MultiMedia, …) Wireless 16 www.intel.com Draft Version (Switching, MultiMedia, …) Intel’s Ecosystem Approach System Integrators or TEMs Intel, Radisys, Force, Kontron, Advantech, ODMs/EMS, MCG, HP, etc. ICA Premiers Intel and Intel® Communications Alliance Board Vendors Intel ICA HW Integrators Security Network Ready Platform App Ready Platform Usability Installation & Maintenance Network Integration Application Software HW Platform Boards, Blades End User and Community Carriers, Requirements Service Providers Solution Requirements Network Solution User Needs Network Protocol Software Operating System, Integrated Manageability Platform Components (Switch, Management, Chassis) Silicon Boards Complementary Silicon Intel Silicon Silicon i/f Board i/f Platform APIs 17 Comms API www.intel.com Draft Version Client API User i/f Current Activities and Beneficiaries User International Privacy Choice Adaptability Ease of use ITU – NGN Focus Group GSC Regional ETSI – Tispan, Tispan, Access Terminals ATIS TOPS – NGN CCSA Provider CapEx/OpEx Time to market Maximum addressable Technology 3GPP – Rel 6 and 7 Wimax Forum Liberty Alliance Manufacturer Reduced development Government Industry Common requirements Transparency GSMA IETF OMA TMF WiMax Many others Social Community demands Global applicability 18 www.intel.com Draft Version What we ’re doing for Digital Home: we’re Secure Content Environment 4C DTCP – 1394, USB, IP in progress 5C CPPM/CPRM – High Def DVD… HDCP – DVI copy protection AACS LA - IBM, Intel, Microsoft, Panasonic, Sony, Toshiba, The Walt Disney Company, and Warner Bros. Studios OMA 2.0 DRM spec CMLA Intel, mm02, Nokia, Panasonic*, RealNetworks, Inc., Samsung and Warner Bros. Studios (Feb ’03 PR) Open Trust System to support OMA 2.0 Translate DRMs, create a standard DRM interface WW Legislative guidance to mediate consumer and content interests 19 www.intel.com Draft Version Change Gears ETSI Human Factors STF165 – User Profile Management 20 www.intel.com Draft Version Past ETSI Human Factors Projects Mobility Universal communications identifier to simplify making connections (STF180, 199, 200), Focus on elderly, young, and disabled (STF230) Accessibility Assistive technology guidelines (TR 102 068) and surveys (TR 102 279) (STF181) Telecommunications for people with special needs Multimodal icons and symbols for graphic interfaces (STF183) Multimodal Interaction, communication and navigation (STF204) Communities Of Interest Generic minimum vocabulary for speech interfaces (STF182) – starting with English, Spanish, French, German, Italian Human factors of work in call centers (STF203) Technology Product design guidelines for information and communications technologies Generic user interfaces Design for all (STF184) 21 www.intel.com Draft Version Current HF Projects Mobility Generic mobile user interface elements (STF231) Mobile e-services Mobile office usability Portable devices and user education Accessibility Distributed universal speech and text (STF267) Video and ICT symbols Language issues in broadband Setup procedures for first time users Communities of interest Telecare in intelligent homes (STF264) User profile management (STF265) ICT and young people (STF266, 201) Technology Supplementary service identification HF bibliographic survey 22 www.intel.com Draft Version What is a User Profile? User and context information used to deliver: appropriate services and content, in a format tailor-made to users’ needs. Profiles contain data describing: The user’s preferences including characteristics abilities needs. Settings, rules and state changes related to User Profile Management system services terminals communications. 23 www.intel.com Draft Version Example – Multimodality Special need - listen to text A blind person or a child who cannot yet read might prefer listening to text. The permanent profile ”Listen to Text”/“Blind” provides this service. 24 www.intel.com Draft Version A person driving a car might prefer listening to text. COST219ter and ePerSpace Scenarios Bill, 24 years old has a severe hearing loss Bill uses a mobile video phone to communicate in sign language via a relay service to book an appointment with the dentist. Bill uses an automated system which recognises his sign language and converts to speech in a choice of languages. 25 www.intel.com Draft Version Issues related to homes/buildings Several persons in the same home with conflicting preferences. Guest profiles? How to reuse profile settings profiles/settings when buying new devices moving Standardization of settings digital homes. If I move, can I use my profiles and will the new house understand my preferences? Use devices in home for automatic activation of user profiles. Example: Open gate activating “Home” profile. Will the house have different profiles? How will the house or office profiles and user profiles interact? Examples: Last person leaving the house would turn off the heating and turn on the alarm. Activating In_Car profile (after the At_Work) 26 www.intel.com Draft Version Future HF Projects Mobility Mobile internet access and e-services Ad-hoc networks Public access points ICT in transportation Real-time user to user multimedia communications Accessibility AT commands for assistive devices Harmonized relay services Access symbols for digital TV Interactive multimedia interfaces for blind users Communities of Interest Enterprise applications involving communications Services and usability testing for children’s ICT use User experience interoperability Language flexible keyboard characters Telecare, and ICT in healthcare Technology Assistive predictive text Spoken command languages 27 www.intel.com Draft Version Change Gears Again Intel Organization Intel Technologies 28 www.intel.com Draft Version New Intel Organization Mobility Group Sean Maloney Dadi Perlmutter Platforms for: Digital Enterprise Group Pat Gelsinger Abhi Talwalkar Platforms for : • Notebook PCs • Computing • Handheld Computing • Servers • Mobile Comms devices • Communications Infrastructure Digital Home Group Digital Health Group Channel Prod Group Don McDonald Louis Burns Bill Siu Platforms for Digital Home • Healthcare Research • Living Room Entertainment • Diagnostics • Consumer electronics • Productivity • Personal Healthcare OrganizationalFocus Focus on onDeveloping Developing Organizational CompleteTechnology Technology Platforms Platforms Complete 29 www.intel.com Draft Version • Products to meet unique needs of local markets Worldwide From Chips To Services Silicon Boards, HW System Complete Solution Chassis, Platform Platform System Software, Product Services Unique valu e-adding act ivities of eac h supplier to do e v a h l l a vities i t c a g n i e-add u l a v n o n Common 30 www.intel.com Draft Version Network Solution User Solution Mobility Mobility & & Wireless Wireless || Device Device Building Building Blocks Blocks Smart Antennas Channel Capacity Move the Channel Capacity Curve “Up” 8 bps/Hz 7 bps/Hz 5 bps/Hz Time Short-term architectures to increase range Sectored antennas – directional antennas Analog combining of multiple antennas Long-term architectures to improve throughput SDMA – Spatial Division Multiple Access (increase users) MIMO – Multi Input Multi Output (increase data rate) Improving ImprovingRadio RadioRange, Range, Capacity, Capacity, and andData DataRates Rates 31 www.intel.com Draft Version Mobility Mobility & & Wireless Wireless || Device Device Building Building Blocks Blocks Intel CMOS RF Development Cognitive Radio for optimal operation based on geography, spectrum conditions, and application requirements Variable Band-pass filters Smart Antennas RCA (Reconfigurable Architecture) for supporting multi Base Bands through a flexible array of heterogeneous processing elements optimized for baseband processing and configurable for various radio schemes 32 www.intel.com Draft Version Integrated, Variable Freq RF transceivers RF1 RF.. RF.. RFN Air Interface Algorithms Engine Reconfigurable Baseband Circuit solutions for WPAN / WLAN / WWAN with compute sensitive CMOS for increasing data rates and Low cost integration for multi band operability Digital Digital Home Home || Networking Networking and and Wireless Wireless Wireless USB First high-speed personal wireless interconnect Based on MB-OFDM UWB Radio from MBOA and WiMEDIA convergence layer Launching at 480 Mbps, 127 connected peripherals, hub-and-spoke topology Complements 802.11 for devices in cluster communication around Intelligent Centers Maintain USB model of cheap, simple devices Symmetric association, security, and ease-of-use Wireless USB specification in Q4 Usage models for CE, PC, Mobile 33 www.intel.com Draft Version Core Core Competencies Competencies || Intel Intel Exploratory Exploratory Research Research Physics Other Examples: • EUVL Masks • Advanced Metrologies for Packaging • Computational NanoNano-Vision Making It Personal Precision Biology Machine Learning Create a new generation of bio-instruments capable of operating in the singlemolecule regime Distributed Systems Silicon Fluid reservoirs and channel Ubiquitous Computing 20µm 280 nm Physics 34 www.intel.com Draft Version Core ’s Law Core Competencies Competencies || Expanding Expanding Moore Moore’s Law Micro -fluidics and Silicon Micro-fluidics Biology Disease Research Biology Medicine DNA Analysis Smart Bandages Nanoscale Silicon Technology Early Disease Detection Health Monitoring 35 www.intel.com Draft Version Core Competencies | Intel Exploratory Research Distributed Systems Other Examples: • Open Research Compiler • Open Runtime Platform • Personal Server • Robotics • DiamondDiamond-massively parallel disk interactive search Making It Personal Machine Learning Planet Lab Global, open test-bed with 65 sites and 160 researchers enhancing distributed Internet services Distributed Systems Ubiquitous Computing Physics 36 www.intel.com Draft Version Core Competencies | Intel Exploratory Research Ubiquitous Computing OtherExamples: OtherExamples: • Location Aware Computing • RF MEMS • Internet Suspend/Resume (seamless mobility) • IrisNetIrisNet-Internet scale sensor networking Making It Personal Multi-hop Sensor Networks Machine Learning Next Generation Sensor Network Building Block-Intel Mote Distributed Systems Ubiquitous Computing • Ultra low power operation • System level integration • Power / performance efficient HW reconfiguration Hardware & Software Modular platform TinyOS applications Sensor board Main board Power board • Sensor board(s) • Main board - CPU, radio, memory • Battery board Physics 37 TinyOS software stack www.intel.com Draft Version TinyOS base Network layer Intel mote layer Intel mote firmware (BT) Intel mote hardware Core ’s Law Core Competencies Competencies || Expanding Expanding Moore Moore’s Law Sensor Networks Process Monitoring And Control Firefighting And Rescue TinyOS TinyDb Sensor Prototype Agriculture Environmental Monitoring Structure And Earthquake Monitoring Making distributed intelligence happen 38 www.intel.com Draft Version Core ’s Law Core Competencies Competencies || Expanding Expanding Moore Moore’s Law Radio Free Intel®® Seamless Roaming MEMS Dynamically Reconfigurable Silicon Radio Regulatory Policy 39 Smart Antenna Systems www.intel.com Draft Version Mobility t Mobility & & Wireless Wireless || Mobile Mobile Application Application and and Service Service Deploymen Deployment Seamless Networking Create an end-to-end architecture that fulfills the customer experience for seamless and simple wireless connectivity Platform integration of advanced Intel wireless comm technologies Identify and develop ecosystem of fellow travelers to complement Intel products 802.11 2.5G/3G Wired LAN 40 www.intel.com Draft Version Architectural Architectural Innovation Innovation || New New Capabilities Capabilities Embedded Security Technology Benefits: Hardware Components • Protects sensitive information from softwarebased attacks without compromising usability • Creates a hardware foundation that helps protect data from software-based attacks • Protected Execution • Protected keyboard and mouse input • Protected Graphics • Enhanced Sealed Storage Intel R&D Efforts: Intel ® Chipset USB • Versatile set of hardware enhancements to Intel processors, chipsets, and platform • Desktop & Mobile platforms in the next 2+ years 41 Intel® Intel® Processor www.intel.com Draft Version LPC TPM* Mobile Mobile & & Wireless Wireless || Wireless Wireless Network Network Connectivity Connectivity Ultra -Wideband (UWB) Ultra-Wideband Benefits: • • • • • MultiBand OFDM technology Very high data rates “Underlay” technology Peaceful co-existance All CMOS, low power, low cost First High-speed Wireless Personal Area Network Intel R&D Efforts: • System Research & HW Prototyping • Circuit Design for scalable bandwidth • Worldwide Approval & Standardization FCC approval for UWB devices Working in Japan, Europe and China to achieve same regulations 42 www.intel.com Draft Version Comms Comms Infrastructure Infrastructure || Broadband Broadband and and Wireless Wireless High -Speed WWAN (802.16e) High-Speed Benefits: High Speed Data/Voice 2 to 11Ghz, licensed and unlicensed Up to 75Mbps Up to 30 Miles, non-line-of-sight QOS for voice, video and differentiated service levels Scalable to 1000’s of users with a single basestation Intel R&D Efforts: Industry leading effort to develop the next generation standards and technology for broadband wireless access Broaden 802.11 system learnings to 802.16 to enable coherent client and system architectures Establish a comprehensive framework to support multi-radio platforms 43 www.intel.com Draft Version Core Competencies | Intel Exploratory Research Making it Personal Other Examples: • iRoom • Speech Recognition • Advanced Conferencing • Proactive Agriculture • Inside Asia • Senseboard • Dialog Interfaces Making It Personal Proactive Health Machine Learning Collaboration, Real People, Real Research Distributed Systems Ubiquitous Computing Physics 44 www.intel.com Draft Version Digital Digital Home Home || Broadband Broadband Proactive Health Mission: catalyze a research ecosystem that address health needs of people in their homes Strategy: focus on supporting the agingin-place needs of the aging “baby boomer” population Transforming smart home/ sensor network technologies from labs to real world trials Current Focus Cognitive Decline Invent systems that provide physical and cognitive assistance for aging boomers Needs assessment Concept Prototyping In-home Trials Develop industry Next Focus Chronic Disease Design systems to aid prevention, detection, & caregiving Cardiovascular – heart attack and surgery recovery Cancer – chronic condition management o CAST, Alzheimers Association *Other names and brands may be claimed as the property of others. www.intel.com Draft Version 45 Digital Digital Home Home || Media Media and and Content Content Content Protection 1. Protection at the source 2. Link technologies Examples • DVD Video • Open Cable Examples • DTCP • HDCP Examples • DVDDVD-Audio • CPRM 3. Portable & customary use 46 www.intel.com Draft Version Intel®® and Technology There are many interesting technologies, but technology does not stand alone Successful new technologies require: Problems to solve Processes to bring them to reality Active commercial and user ecosystems Sensitivity to global impacts and benefits 47 www.intel.com Draft Version Intel may make changes to specifications, product descriptions, and plans at any time, without notice. So, What Will ““It” It” Look Like? It will be different than any of us can imagine! So prepare to be flexible. Support open solutions that can incrementally evolve. Share end user solution scenarios. Do not limit solution evolution with tactical restrictions. Allow customer mobility and choice in their bundle selection. Interact with competing solutions. 48 www.intel.com Draft Version Thank You Very Much! Walt Brown [email protected] Network Systems Architect Applied Telecom Solutions Center Intel Digital Enterprise Group For More Information …… Information…… Intel Communications Alliance Intel Digital Home Developers Intel® Communications Alliance http://www.intel.com/technology/dhdevnet/ http://www.intel.com/go/ICA Intel VoIP and Technologies AdvancedTCA* http://www.intel.com/go/voip/ http://www.intel.com/technology/atca/index.htm http://www.intel.com/techtrends/ http://www.intel.com/network/csp/pdf/8822wp.ht m Intel® NetStructure™ Host Media Processing Software Compute Boards and Platforms http://www.intel.com/go/mediaprocessing ETSI HF STF265 Profile Management All Telecom Information http://portal.etsi.org/STFs/HF/STF265.asp http://www.intel.com/design/network/products/cb p/index.htm http://www.intel.com/go/telecom 49 www.intel.com Draft Version Copyright © Intel Corporation 2004. Intel, Celeron, Intel Inside, Intel SpeedStep, Intel NetStructure, Intel Xeon, Itanium, Pentium, and the Intel logo are trademarks or registered trademarks of Intel or its subsidiaries in the United States and other countries. *Other names and brands may be claimed as the property of others. Performance tests and ratings are measured using specific computer systems and/or components and reflect the approximate performance of Intel products as measured by those tests. Any difference in system hardware or software design or configuration may affect actual performance. Buyers should consult other sources of information to evaluate the performance of systems or components they are considering purchasing. For more information on performance tests and on the performance of Intel products, reference [www.intel.com] or call (U.S.) 1-800-628-8686 or 1-916-356-3104. 00-9465-001 01/05 50 www.intel.com Draft Version