1,705 research outputs found

    Integrating mobile and cloud resources management using the cloud personal assistant

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    The mobile cloud computing model promises to address the resource limitations of mobile devices, but effectively implementing this model is difficult. Previous work on mobile cloud computing has required the user to have a continuous, high-quality connection to the cloud infrastructure. This is undesirable and possibly infeasible, as the energy required on the mobile device to maintain a connection, and transfer sizeable amounts of data is large; the bandwidth tends to be quite variable, and low on cellular networks. The cloud deployment itself needs to efficiently allocate scalable resources to the user as well. In this paper, we formulate the best practices for efficiently managing the resources required for the mobile cloud model, namely energy, bandwidth and cloud computing resources. These practices can be realised with our mobile cloud middleware project, featuring the Cloud Personal Assistant (CPA). We compare this with the other approaches in the area, to highlight the importance of minimising the usage of these resources, and therefore ensure successful adoption of the model by end users. Based on results from experiments performed with mobile devices, we develop a no-overhead decision model for task and data offloading to the CPA of a user, which provides efficient management of mobile cloud resources

    Towards More Efficient 5G Networks via Dynamic Traffic Scheduling

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    Department of Electrical EngineeringThe 5G communications adopt various advanced technologies such as mobile edge computing and unlicensed band operations, to meet the goal of 5G services such as enhanced Mobile Broadband (eMBB) and Ultra Reliable Low Latency Communications (URLLC). Specifically, by placing the cloud resources at the edge of the radio access network, so-called mobile edge cloud, mobile devices can be served with lower latency compared to traditional remote-cloud based services. In addition, by utilizing unlicensed spectrum, 5G can mitigate the scarce spectrum resources problem thus leading to realize higher throughput services. To enhance user-experienced service quality, however, aforementioned approaches should be more fine-tuned by considering various network performance metrics altogether. For instance, the mechanisms for mobile edge computing, e.g., computation offloading to the edge cloud, should not be optimized in a specific metric's perspective like latency, since actual user satisfaction comes from multi-domain factors including latency, throughput, monetary cost, etc. Moreover, blindly combining unlicensed spectrum resources with licensed ones does not always guarantee the performance enhancement, since it is crucial for unlicensed band operations to achieve peaceful but efficient coexistence with other competing technologies (e.g., Wi-Fi). This dissertation proposes a focused resource management framework for more efficient 5G network operations as follows. First, Quality-of-Experience is adopted to quantify user satisfaction in mobile edge computing, and the optimal transmission scheduling algorithm is derived to maximize user QoE in computation offloading scenarios. Next, regarding unlicensed band operations, two efficient mechanisms are introduced to improve the coexistence performance between LTE-LAA and Wi-Fi networks. In particular, we develop a dynamic energy-detection thresholding algorithm for LTE-LAA so that LTE-LAA devices can detect Wi-Fi frames in a lightweight way. In addition, we propose AI-based network configuration for an LTE-LAA network with which an LTE-LAA operator can fine-tune its coexistence parameters (e.g., CAA threshold) to better protect coexisting Wi-Fi while achieving enhanced performance than the legacy LTE-LAA in the standards. Via extensive evaluations using computer simulations and a USRP-based testbed, we have verified that the proposed framework can enhance the efficiency of 5G.clos
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