390 research outputs found

    Long-term drivers of broadband traffic in next-generation networks

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    This paper is concerned with long-term (20+ years) forecasting of broadband traffic in next-generation networks. Such long-term approach requires going beyond extrapolations of past traffic data while facing high uncertainty in predicting the future developments and facing the fact that, in 20 years, the current network technologies and architectures will be obsolete. Thus, "order of magnitude" upper bounds of upstream and downstream traffic are deemed to be good enough to facilitate such long-term forecasting. These bounds can be obtained by evaluating the limits of human sighting and assuming that these limits will be achieved by future services or, alternatively, by considering the contents transferred by bandwidth-demanding applications such as those using embedded interactive 3D video streaming. The traffic upper bounds are a good indication of the peak values and, subsequently, also of the future network capacity demands. Furthermore, the main drivers of traffic growth including multimedia as well as non-multimedia applications are identified. New disruptive applications and services are explored that can make good use of the large bandwidth provided by next-generation networks. The results can be used to identify monetization opportunities of future services and to map potential revenues for network operators

    Optimizing resilience decision-support for natural gas networks under uncertainty

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    2019 Summer.Includes bibliographical references.Community resilience in the aftermath of a hazard requires the functionality of complex, interdependent infrastructure systems become operational in a timely manner to support social and economic institutions. In the context of risk management and community resilience, critical decisions should be made not only in the aftermath of a disaster in order to immediately respond to the destructive event and properly repair the damage, but preventive decisions should to be made in order to mitigate the adverse impacts of hazards prior to their occurrence. This involves significant uncertainty about the basic notion of the hazard itself, and usually involves mitigation strategies such as strengthening components or preparing required resources for post-event repairs. In essence, instances of risk management problems that encourage a framework for coupled decisions before and after events include modeling how to allocate resources before the disruptive event so as to maximize the efficiency for their distribution to repair in the aftermath of the event, and how to determine which network components require preventive investments in order to enhance their performance in case of an event. In this dissertation, a methodology is presented for optimal decision making for resilience assessment, seismic risk mitigation, and recovery of natural gas networks, taking into account their interdependency with some of the other systems within the community. In this regard, the natural gas and electric power networks of a virtual community were modeled with enough detail such that it enables assessment of natural gas network supply at the community level. The effect of the industrial makeup of a community on its natural gas recovery following an earthquake, as well as the effect of replacing conventional steel pipes with ductile HDPE pipelines as an effective mitigation strategy against seismic hazard are investigated. In addition, a multi objective optimization framework that integrates probabilistic seismic risk assessment of coupled infrastructure systems and evolutionary algorithms is proposed in order to determine cost-optimal decisions before and after a seismic event, with the objective of making the natural gas network recover more rapidly, and thus the community more resilient. Including bi-directional interdependencies between the natural gas and electric power network, strategic decisions are pursued regarding which distribution pipelines in the gas network should be retrofitted under budget constraints, with the objectives to minimizing the number of people without natural gas in the residential sector and business losses due to the lack of natural gas in non-residential sectors. Monte Carlo Simulation (MCS) is used in order to propagate uncertainties and Probabilistic Seismic Hazard Assessment (PSHA) is adopted in order to capture uncertainties in the seismic hazard with an approach to preserve spatial correlation. A non-dominated sorting genetic algorithm (NSGA-II) approach is utilized to solve the multi-objective optimization problem under study. The results prove the potential of the developed methodology to provide risk-informed decision support, while being able to deal with large-scale, interdependent complex infrastructure considering probabilistic seismic hazard scenarios

    Future Trends and Challenges for Mobile and Convergent Networks

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    Some traffic characteristics like real-time, location-based, and community-inspired, as well as the exponential increase on the data traffic in mobile networks, are challenging the academia and standardization communities to manage these networks in completely novel and intelligent ways, otherwise, current network infrastructures can not offer a connection service with an acceptable quality for both emergent traffic demand and application requisites. In this way, a very relevant research problem that needs to be addressed is how a heterogeneous wireless access infrastructure should be controlled to offer a network access with a proper level of quality for diverse flows ending at multi-mode devices in mobile scenarios. The current chapter reviews recent research and standardization work developed under the most used wireless access technologies and mobile access proposals. It comprehensively outlines the impact on the deployment of those technologies in future networking environments, not only on the network performance but also in how the most important requirements of several relevant players, such as, content providers, network operators, and users/terminals can be addressed. Finally, the chapter concludes referring the most notable aspects in how the environment of future networks are expected to evolve like technology convergence, service convergence, terminal convergence, market convergence, environmental awareness, energy-efficiency, self-organized and intelligent infrastructure, as well as the most important functional requisites to be addressed through that infrastructure such as flow mobility, data offloading, load balancing and vertical multihoming.Comment: In book 4G & Beyond: The Convergence of Networks, Devices and Services, Nova Science Publishers, 201

    Context-awareness for ubiquitous media service delivery in next generation networks

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    Les rĂ©centes avancĂ©es technologiques permettent dĂ©sormais la fabrication de terminaux mobiles de plus en plus compacts et dotĂ©s de plusieurs interfaces rĂ©seaux. Le nouveau modĂšle de consommation de mĂ©dias se rĂ©sume par le concept "Anytime, Anywhere, Any Device" et impose donc de nouvelles exigences en termes de dĂ©ploiement de services ubiquitaires. Cependant la conception et le developpement de rĂ©seaux ubiquitaires et convergents de nouvelles gĂ©nĂ©rations soulĂšvent un certain nombre de dĂ©fis techniques. Les standards actuels ainsi que les solutions commerciales pourraient ĂȘtre affectĂ©s par le manque de considĂ©ration du contexte utilisateur. Le ressenti de l'utilisateur concernant certains services multimĂ©dia tels que la VoIP et l'IPTV dĂ©pend fortement des capacitĂ©s du terminal et des conditions du rĂ©seau d'accĂšs. Cela incite les rĂ©seaux de nouvelles gĂ©nĂ©rations Ă  fournir des services ubiquitaires adaptĂ©s Ă  l'environnement de l'utilisateur optimisant par la mĂȘme occasion ses resources. L'IP Multimedia Subsystem (IMS) est une architecture de nouvelle gĂ©nĂ©ration qui centralise l'accĂšs aux services et permet la convergence des rĂ©seaux fixe/mobile. NĂ©anmoins, l'Ă©volution de l'IMS est nĂ©cessaire sur les points suivants :- l'introduction de la sensibilitĂ© au contexte utilisateur et de la PQoS (Perceived QoS) : L'architecture IMS ne prend pas en compte l'environnement de l'utilisateur, ses prĂ©fĂ©rences et ne dispose pas d'un mĂ©chanisme de gestion de PQOS. Pour s'assurer de la qualitĂ© fournit Ă  l'utilisateur final, des informations sur l'environnement de l'utilisateur ainsi que ses prĂ©fĂ©rences doivent transiter en cƓur de rĂ©seau afin d'y ĂȘtre analysĂ©s. Ce traitement aboutit au lancement du service qui sera adaptĂ© et optimisĂ© aux conditions observĂ©es. De plus pour le service d'IPTV, les caractĂ©ristiques spatio-temporelles de la vidĂ©o influent de maniĂšre importante sur la PQoS observĂ©e cĂŽtĂ© utilisateur. L'adaptation des services multimĂ©dias en fonction de l'Ă©volution du contexte utilisateur et de la nature de la vidĂ©o diffusĂ©e assure une qualitĂ© d'expĂ©rience Ă  l'utilisateur et optimise par la mĂȘme occasion l'utilisation des ressources en cƓur de rĂ©seau.- une solution de mobilitĂ© efficace pour les services conversationnels tels que la VoIP : Les derniĂšres publications 3GPP fournissent deux solutions de mobilitĂ©: le LTE proposeMIP comme solution de mobilitĂ© alors que l'IMS dĂ©finit une mobilitĂ© basĂ©e sur le protocoleapplicatif SIP. Ces standards dĂ©finissent le systĂšme de signalisation mais ne s'avancent pas sur la gestion du flux mĂ©dia lors du changement d'interface rĂ©seau. La deuxiĂšme section introduit une Ă©tude comparative dĂ©taillĂ©e des solutions de mobilitĂ© dans les NGNs.Notre premiĂšre contribution est la spĂ©cification de l'architecture globale de notre plateforme IMS sensible au contexte utilisateur rĂ©alisĂ©e au sein du projet EuropĂ©en ADAMANTIUM. Nous dĂ©taillons tout d'abord le serveur MCMS intelligent placĂ© dans la couche application de l'IMS. Cet Ă©lĂ©ment rĂ©colte les informations de qualitĂ© de services Ă  diffĂ©rents Ă©quipements rĂ©seaux et prend la dĂ©cision d'une action sur l'un de ces Ă©quipements. Ensuite nous dĂ©finissons un profil utilisateur permettant de dĂ©crire son environnement et de le diffuser en coeur de rĂ©seau. Une Ă©tude sur la prĂ©diction de satisfaction utilisateur en fonction des paramĂštres spatio-temporels de la vidĂ©o a Ă©tĂ© rĂ©alisĂ©e afin de connaĂźtre le dĂ©bit idĂ©al pour une PQoS dĂ©sirĂ©e.Notre deuxiĂšme contribution est l'introduction d'une solution de mobilitĂ© adaptĂ©e aux services conversationnels (VoIP) tenant compte du contexte utilisateur. Notre solution s'intĂšgre Ă  l'architecture IMS existante de façon transparente et permet de rĂ©duire le temps de latence du handover. Notre solution duplique les paquets de VoIP sur les deux interfaces actives pendant le temps de la transition. ParallĂšlement, un nouvel algorithme de gestion de mĂ©moire tampon amĂ©liore la qualitĂ© d'expĂ©rience pour le service de VoIP.The latest advances in technology have already defied Moore s law. Thanks to research and industry, hand-held devices are composed of high processing embedded systems enabling the consumption of high quality services. Furthermore, recent trends in communication drive users to consume media Anytime, Anywhere on Any Device via multiple wired and wireless network interfaces. This creates new demands for ubiquitous and high quality service provision management. However, defining and developing the next generation of ubiquitous and converged networks raise a number of challenges. Currently, telecommunication standards do not consider context-awareness aspects for network management and service provisioning. The experience felt by the end-user consuming for instance Voice over IP (VoIP) or Internet Protocol TeleVision (IPTV) services varies depending mainly on user preferences, device context and network resources. It is commonly held that Next Generation Network (NGN) should deliver personalized and effective ubiquitous services to the end user s Mobile Node (MN) while optimizing the network resources at the network operator side. IP Multimedia Subsystem (IMS) is a standardized NGN framework that unifies service access and allows fixed/mobile network convergence. Nevertheless IMS technology still suffers from a number of confining factors that are addressed in this thesis; amongst them are two main issues :The lack of context-awareness and Perceived-QoS (PQoS):-The existing IMS infrastructure does not take into account the environment of the user ,his preferences , and does not provide any PQoS aware management mechanism within its service provisioning control system. In order to ensure that the service satisfies the consumer, this information need to be sent to the core network for analysis. In order to maximize the end-user satisfaction while optimizing network resources, the combination of a user-centric network management and adaptive services according to the user s environment and network conditions are considered. Moreover, video content dynamics are also considered as they significantly impact on the deduced perceptual quality of IPTV services. -The lack of efficient mobility mechanism for conversational services like VoIP :The latest releases of Third Generation Partnership Project (3GPP) provide two types of mobility solutions. Long-Term Evolution (LTE) uses Mobile IP (MIP) and IMS uses Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) mobility. These standards are focusing on signaling but none of them define how the media should be scheduled in multi-homed devices. The second section introduces a detailed study of existing mobility solutions in NGNs. Our first contribution is the specification of the global context-aware IMS architecture proposed within the European project ADAptative Management of mediA distributioN based on saTisfaction orIented User Modeling (ADAMANTIUM). We introduce the innovative Multimedia Content Management System (MCMS) located in the application layer of IMS. This server combines the collected monitoring information from different network equipments with the data of the user profile and takes adaptation actions if necessary. Then, we introduce the User Profile (UP) management within the User Equipment (UE) describing the end-user s context and facilitating the diffusion of the end-user environment towards the IMS core network. In order to optimize the network usage, a PQoS prediction mechanism gives the optimal video bit-rate according to the video content dynamics. Our second contribution in this thesis is an efficient mobility solution for VoIP service within IMS using and taking advantage of user context. Our solution uses packet duplication on both active interfaces during handover process. In order to leverage this mechanism, a new jitter buffer algorithm is proposed at MN side to improve the user s quality of experience. Furthermore, our mobility solution integrates easily to the existing IMS platform.BORDEAUX1-Bib.electronique (335229901) / SudocSudocFranceF
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