With increasing popularity of media enabled hand-helds and their integration
with the in-vehicle entertainment systems, the need for high data-rate services
for mobile users on the go is evident. This ever-increasing demand of data is
constantly surpassing what cellular networks can economically support.
Large-scale Wireless LANs (WLANs) can provide such a service, but they are
expensive to deploy and maintain. Open WLAN access-points, on the other hand,
need no new deployments, but can offer only opportunistic services, lacking any
performance guarantees. In contrast, a carefully planned sparse deployment of
roadside WiFi provides an economically scalable infrastructure with quality of
service assurance to mobile users. In this paper, we present a new metric,
called Contact Opportunity, to closely model the quality of data service that a
mobile user might experience when driving through the system. We then present
efficient deployment algorithms for minimizing the cost for ensuring a required
level of contact opportunity. We further extend this concept and the deployment
techniques to a more intuitive metric -- the average throughput -- by taking
various dynamic elements into account. Simulations over a real road network and
experimental results show that our approach achieves significantly better cost
vs. throughput tradeoff in both the worst case and average case compared with
some commonly used deployment algorithms.Comment: Technical report - this work was submitted to IEEE/ACM Transactions
on Networking, June 201