238). It would also appear that a growing number of vendors are recognizing the inherent constraints involved in the previous MIMO configuration and are developing superior alternatives. In this regard, according to Hedayat and his associates (2007), "Many MIMO systems for WiMAX are being developed without beamforming, and although it helps in robustness and can add some capacity, MIMO does nothing for the uplink. The result will be an uplink limited system that either has very slow uplink and frequent coverage holes, or a system that requires many more base stations and cell sites for universal coverage" (p. 8). Navini is in the process of introducing a new standards compliant MIMO solution that it calls "Smart MIMO"; Smart MIMO applies adaptive beamforming to MIMO in order to provide additional benefits beyond what simple MIMO can provide (Hedayat et al.) in the case of MIMO-a, the Space Time Coded signals are both beamformed using the adaptive beamforming algorithms based on measurements taken on the uplink channel (Hedayat et al.). The signals in the MIMO -- a configuration are also managed in phase in order to assure their optimal reception at the mobile station (Hedayat et al.).
While the pundits continue to debate the pace at which the world will ultimately reach a truly ubiquitous computing environment, the hand-writing is on the wall for everyone else to see and it appears the time is ripe for WiMAX today. As Hedayat and colleagues emphasize, "The performance improvements promised by MIMO, and later beamforming in WiMAX deployment scenarios are essential components for the delivery of true broadband services. MIMO equipment is already being deployed in the Wi-Fi market for IEEE802.11n products and has demonstrated massive increases in capacity. Clearly the environment represented by WiMAX is quite different from that of Wi-Fi and interference management is a key concern for WiMAX" (p. 17). Interference management concerns, though, are not restricted to WiMAX but are equally relevant for other technologies in use and envisioned and there issues are discussed further below.
Current Scenario and Importance of Comparison to Other Technology.
Because resources are by definition scarce and the costs associated with implementing and maintaining a sophisticated WiMAX system are not small, it just makes good business sense to determine if the WiMAX approach is worthy of the capital investments involved or whether a "wait-and-see" approach might be more prudent. Nevertheless, the need is great today and experts predict that demand will continue to grow in the future. According to Chen, Ahmad and Hanzo (n.d.)., "The ever-increasing demand for mobile communication capacity has motivated the needs for new technologies, such as space division multiple access, to improve spectrum utilization" (p. 1). Not surprisingly, there have been a number of approaches developed and tested in recent years in an effort to satisfy this growing demand and generate a profit in the process, but some approaches have clearly been better suited to existing needs than others. For instance, in their study, "Universal Broadband Access: Going Wireless and Mobile," Hurel, Brouet, Le Gouriellec and Peruyero (2005) ask, "GSM/EDGE, UMTS/HSDPA/HSUPA, WiMAX, CDMA2000, UMTS-TDD-HCR, TD-SCDMA, WiFi, mobile broadcast! What is the best technology to select? Are there any bad technologies that we can forget?" (p. 1). It is easy to become confused in this alphabet of choices, but an increasing number of industry experts suggest that the technology of choice today is WiMAX IEEE 802.16e, and these issues are discussed further below.
WiMAX (IEEE 802.16e)
The evolution of the WiMAX system from its 80216a permutation to its current 802.16e approach has been enthusiastically received by the mobile telecommunications industry as a revolution in how cellular services are provided. For instance, in their white paper, Airspan (2007) reports that, "Multiple Antenna Systems in WiMAX," WiMAX, championed by the WiMAX Forum to promote conformance and interoperability of the IEEE 802.16 standard, has revolutionised the wireless wide area broadband communications. The latest version of the standard, IEEE 802.16e-2005, extends the earlier specifications in order to address the requirements of mobile WiMAX deployments" (p. 3). According to Muquet, Biglieri, Goldsmith and Sari (n.d.), "WiMAX systems are based on the IEEE 802.16-2004 and IEEE 802.16e-2005 standards which define a physical (PHY) layer and the medium access control (MAC) layer for broadband wireless access systems operating at frequencies below 11 GHz. The first of these standards, published in 2004, addresses fixed services, and the second, published in 2005, is intended for mobile services" (p. 4). According to Airspan (2007), "The underlying WiMAX PHY is ideally suited to multipath operations in...
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