July 1999 doc IEEE 802 15 99027 r

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July 1999 doc. : IEEE 802. 15 -99/027 r 1 WPAN Background Submission 1

July 1999 doc. : IEEE 802. 15 -99/027 r 1 WPAN Background Submission 1 Robert F. Heile, GTE

July 1999 doc. : IEEE 802. 15 -99/027 r 1 WPAN-Background • Started as

July 1999 doc. : IEEE 802. 15 -99/027 r 1 WPAN-Background • Started as an Ad Hoc group under PASC in June 1997 - led by Dick Braley, Fedex • Transitioned to a Study Group under 802. 11 within LMSC in March 1998 • Became a full Working Group of 802 in March 1999 Submission 2 Robert F. Heile, GTE

July 1999 doc. : IEEE 802. 15 -99/027 r 1 WPAN Background - Meetings

July 1999 doc. : IEEE 802. 15 -99/027 r 1 WPAN Background - Meetings • • • • June, 1997. Cleveland, OH, Request to PASC July 16, 1997. Nashua, NH IEEE PASC Plenary Meeting December 2, 1997. Cleveland, OH Ad Hoc Wearables Committee Meeting January 14 -15, 1998. Memphis, TN, Ad Hoc Wearables Committee Meeting January 19 -23, 1998 Lynnwood, WA IEEE 802. 11 Interim Meeting March 9 -13, 1998 Irvine, CA IEEE 802 Plenary Meeting (SG formed) April 8 -9, 1998 Cambridge, MA IEEE 802. 11 WPAN SG Meeting May 4 -8, 1998 Utrecht, NL IEEE 802. 11 Interim Meeting May 19 -21, 1998 Irving, TX IEEE 802. 11 WPAN SG Meeting July 6 -10, 1998 La. Jolla, CA 802 Plenary Meeting September 14 -18, 1998 Westford, MA 802. 11 Interim Meeting October 26, 1998 Atlanta, GA Ad Hoc WPAN SG Meeting November 9 -13, 1998 Albuquerque, NM 802 Plenary Meeting January 11 -15, 1999 Orlando, FL 802. 11 Interim Meeting March 8 -12, 1999 Austin, TX 802 Plenary Meeting Submission 3 Robert F. Heile, GTE

July 1999 doc. : IEEE 802. 15 -99/027 r 1 WPAN Background - Companies

July 1999 doc. : IEEE 802. 15 -99/027 r 1 WPAN Background - Companies • • • • • • • • • • • 3 Com Aironet Amerisys AMD AMP ARIB Boeing Bosch Breeze. COM Broadband Access Systems, Inc. Butterfly Communications, Inc. Carnegie Mellon Clarion Commcepts Compaq/DEC Conexant Fed. Ex GTE/BBN Harris H-P Informed Technology, Inc. Submission 4 Intermec/Norand Kodak Kyocera Lace Lucent Mc. Donnel Douglas Micrilor MIT Media Lab Motorola Netwave PED Inc. Philips Raytheon Sanders Sprint PCS Symbol Texas Instruments Unisys Vi. A Walt Disney Xetron etc. Robert F. Heile, GTE

July 1999 doc. : IEEE 802. 15 -99/027 r 1 WPAN Vision Statement RFID

July 1999 doc. : IEEE 802. 15 -99/027 r 1 WPAN Vision Statement RFID WPAN WLANs Low performance, low cost High performance, higher cost • Continuum of needs for wireless products • No one product which can fill all needs • Family of complementary devices Source: doc. : IEEE 802. 11 -98/97 (Pat Kinney, Intermec) Submission 5 Robert F. Heile, GTE

July 1999 doc. : IEEE 802. 15 -99/027 r 1 WPAN Study Group Objective

July 1999 doc. : IEEE 802. 15 -99/027 r 1 WPAN Study Group Objective • • Review WPAN/WLAN Requirements Determine Need for Standard If warranted draft a PAR for submittal Seek appropriate Sponsorship within 802 The IEEE 802 Local and Metropolitan Area Network Standards Committee has the basic charter to create, maintain, and encourage the use of IEEE/ANSI and equivalent IEC/ISO JTC 1 standards primarily within layers 1 and 2 of the OSI (Open System Interconnection) Reference Model. Submission 6 Robert F. Heile, GTE

July 1999 doc. : IEEE 802. 15 -99/027 r 1 WPAN Original Functional Requirements

July 1999 doc. : IEEE 802. 15 -99/027 r 1 WPAN Original Functional Requirements published 1/98 January 22, 1998 • Power Management: Low current consumption • Range: 0 -10 meters • Speed: 19. 2 - 100 Kbps (actual) • Small Size e. g. , ~. 5 cubic inches no antenna • Low Cost: i. e. , relative to target device • Should allow overlap of multiple networks in the same area • Networking support for a minimum of sixteen devices March 4, 1998 1997 May 20, 1998 Source: doc. : IEEE 802. 11 -98/58 (Bob Heile, GTE) Submission 7 Robert F. Heile, GTE

July 1999 doc. : IEEE 802. 15 -99/027 r 1 WPAN Application Summary Submitter

July 1999 doc. : IEEE 802. 15 -99/027 r 1 WPAN Application Summary Submitter Attributes Source: doc. : IEEE 802. 11 -98/353 (Bruce Kraemer, Harris) Submission 8 Robert F. Heile, GTE

July 1999 doc. : IEEE 802. 15 -99/027 r 1 Current 802. 15 WPAN

July 1999 doc. : IEEE 802. 15 -99/027 r 1 Current 802. 15 WPAN Functional Requirements- “A” List • Worldwide spectrum allocations for unlicensed bands such as 2. 4 GHz • Low Cost: i. e. , relative to target device • Small Size e. g. , ~. 5 cubic inches( excludes antenna & battery) • Power Management: Very Low current consumption (Average 20 mw or less @ 10% Tx/Rx load) Source: doc. : IEEE 802. 11 -98/160 r 2 (Ian Gifford, M/A-COM) Submission 9 Robert F. Heile, GTE

July 1999 doc. : IEEE 802. 15 -99/027 r 1 Current 802. 15 WPAN

July 1999 doc. : IEEE 802. 15 -99/027 r 1 Current 802. 15 WPAN Functional Requirements- “A” List (cont. ) • Asynchronous or connection-less data links • Allow coexistence of multiple Wireless PAN’s in the same area (20 within 400 square feet) • Allow coexistence of multiple Wireless Systems such as P 802. 11 in the same area • WPAN Network Access Control Source: doc. : IEEE 802. 11 -98/160 r 2 (Ian Gifford, M/A-COM) Submission 10 Robert F. Heile, GTE

July 1999 doc. : IEEE 802. 15 -99/027 r 1 Current 802. 15 WPAN

July 1999 doc. : IEEE 802. 15 -99/027 r 1 Current 802. 15 WPAN Functional Requirements- “B” List • Range: 0 -10 meters • Networking support for a minimum of 16 devices • Attach: within one (1) second, once within range • Bridge or Gateway connectivity to other data networks Source: doc. : IEEE 802. 11 -98/160 r 2 (Ian Gifford, M/A-COM) Submission 11 Robert F. Heile, GTE

July 1999 doc. : IEEE 802. 15 -99/027 r 1 Current 802. 15 WPAN

July 1999 doc. : IEEE 802. 15 -99/027 r 1 Current 802. 15 WPAN Functional Requirements- “B” List (cont. ) • Delivered Data Throughput at the MAC SAP: (19. 2 - 100) kbit/s (actual 1 device to 1 device) • All devices within a WPAN must be able to communicate with each other • Address Qo. S to support a variety of traffic types • Synchronous, and connection-oriented links Source: doc. : IEEE 802. 11 -98/160 r 2 (Ian Gifford, M/A-COM) Submission 12 Robert F. Heile, GTE

July 1999 doc. : IEEE 802. 15 -99/027 r 1 Current 802. 15 WPAN

July 1999 doc. : IEEE 802. 15 -99/027 r 1 Current 802. 15 WPAN Functional Requirements- “C” List • No single element of failure • Video • Roaming: hand-off to another PAN Source: doc. : IEEE 802. 11 -98/160 r 2 (Ian Gifford, M/A-COM) Submission 13 Robert F. Heile, GTE

July 1999 doc. : IEEE 802. 15 -99/027 r 1 WPAN Background - Liaisons

July 1999 doc. : IEEE 802. 15 -99/027 r 1 WPAN Background - Liaisons Our Sponsor submitted an IEEE Liaison Letter to the following Groups: • • ATM Forum Wireless ATM (WATM) Working Group Bluetooth Special Interest Group ETSI Broadband Radio Access Networks (BRAN) Project Infrared Data Association (Ir. DA) Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), Mobile. IP Home Radio Frequency Working Group (HRFWG) Wireless LAN Alliance (WLANA) Submission 14 Robert F. Heile, GTE

July 1999 doc. : IEEE 802. 15 -99/027 r 1 PAN Related Activities •

July 1999 doc. : IEEE 802. 15 -99/027 r 1 PAN Related Activities • Bluetooth--over 900 Companies Participating Spec-June 99 • Home. RF/Firefly-- over 90 Companies Spec Dec 98/Dec 99 • WPAN SG-- ~50 Companies Participating Target Standard Nov 00 • Others – Intermec, Motorola, Butterfly, Kodak. . . Submission 15 Robert F. Heile, GTE

July 1999 doc. : IEEE 802. 15 -99/027 r 1 We reviewed the Liaison

July 1999 doc. : IEEE 802. 15 -99/027 r 1 We reviewed the Liaison Usage Models for applicability Bluetooth • Three-In-One Phone • Interactive Conference • Briefcase Trick • Forbidden Message • Automatic Synchronizer • Instant Postcard • Portable PC Speaker Phone • Cordless Desktop • Videos • Ultimate Headset • Internet Bridge Submission • 16 Home. RF Set up a wireless home network to share voice and data between PC's, peripherals, PC-enhanced cordless phones, and new devices such as portable, remote display pads • Access the Internet from anywhere in and around the home from portable display devices • Share an ISP connection between PC's and other new devices • • Share files/modems/printers in multi-PC homes • Review incoming voice, FAX and e-mail messages from a small PC-enhanced cordless telephone handset • Activate other home electronic systems by simply speaking a command into a PC-enhanced cordless handset • Multi-player games and/or toys based on PC or Internet resources Robert F. Heile, GTE Intelligently forward incoming telephone calls to multiple cordless handsets, FAX machines and voice mailboxes

July 1999 doc. : IEEE 802. 15 -99/027 r 1 WPAN Liaison & Submissions

July 1999 doc. : IEEE 802. 15 -99/027 r 1 WPAN Liaison & Submissions Wireless Personal Area Networking 5. March 8, 1999 or sooner IEEE 802. 11 Home. RF Lite Bluetooth Kodak Intermec 4. January 15, 1999 or sooner IEEE 802. 11 Home. RF Lite Bluetooth Intermec Kodak 3. November 13, 1998 or sooner IEEE 802. 11 Home. RF Lite Bluetooth Intermec 2. July 10, 1998 or sooner IEEE 802. 11 Home. RF Lite Bluetooth GTE Intermec Motorola M/A-COM 1. May 22, 1998 or sooner IEEE 802. 11 1997 Home. RF 3/4/98 Convergence Achieved Submission Bluetooth 5/20/98 GTE 5/22/98 Convergence Happening Intermec 5/22/98 Possible Convergence 17 M/A-COM 5/22/98 Liaison Call For Proposals Robert F. Heile, GTE

July 1999 doc. : IEEE 802. 15 -99/027 r 1 Task Group vs Working

July 1999 doc. : IEEE 802. 15 -99/027 r 1 Task Group vs Working Group The 802. 11 WG and the WPAN SG: ü agreed on the need for a WPAN Standard ü agreed that there is a strong market demand for a consumer-cost, low power solution ü agreed on a PAR to accomplish that task ü agreed on the importance of Coexistence and the need for etiquette in the use of a shared medium 8 disagree on the venue to best create a WPAN Standard Submission 18 Robert F. Heile, GTE

July 1999 doc. : IEEE 802. 15 -99/027 r 1 Market Hypotheses • A

July 1999 doc. : IEEE 802. 15 -99/027 r 1 Market Hypotheses • A WPAN Standard that does not involve Bluetooth as a participant will have a tough time gaining market acceptance • Multiple independent efforts will aggravate coexistence and interference issues Submission 19 Robert F. Heile, GTE

July 1999 doc. : IEEE 802. 15 -99/027 r 1 Imperatives for Success •

July 1999 doc. : IEEE 802. 15 -99/027 r 1 Imperatives for Success • Need a forum that can attract members who feel they have equal standing • Need to get active participation from Members of Bluetooth, Home. RF/Firefly, 802. 11, etc • Need a forum which can take a fresh look, evaluate different proposals and find compromise solutions that address broad market applicability as well as technical merits • Speed is of the essence--1 -2 years maximum Submission 20 Robert F. Heile, GTE

July 1999 doc. : IEEE 802. 15 -99/027 r 1 The Advantages of a

July 1999 doc. : IEEE 802. 15 -99/027 r 1 The Advantages of a WG • Has the stature required to work more effectively with significant external groups • Easier to act as the agent of compromise • Greater freedom of action • Singular purpose promotes speed and efficiency Submission 21 Robert F. Heile, GTE

July 1999 doc. : IEEE 802. 15 -99/027 r 1 The Bottom Line Strongly

July 1999 doc. : IEEE 802. 15 -99/027 r 1 The Bottom Line Strongly urge the SEC to pass a motion to form a WPAN Working Group • Finding effective compromise solutions is imperative to shared use, interoperability, success and acceptance. • The perception of balance needs to be assured. • The issue is not whether a lite version of. 11 can do the job, more important is market acceptance of a standard that does the job. • Multiple WPAN standards are likely to address this space. Submission 22 Robert F. Heile, GTE

July 1999 doc. : IEEE 802. 15 -99/027 r 1 P 802. 15 Working

July 1999 doc. : IEEE 802. 15 -99/027 r 1 P 802. 15 Working Group on Wireless Personal Area Networks approved March 18, 1999 • Austin, TX, April 14, 1999 - IEEE P 802 LAN/MAN Standards Committee (LMSC) is pleased to announce the formation of a new Working Group to develop standards for Wireless Personal Area Networks for portable and mobile computing devices. Portable and mobile computing devices are defined as unobtrusive computing devices, networking devices, software and peripherals which are worn or carried by individuals to enhance their ability to perform productive work as well as provide entertainment. • The new group is designated P 802. 15 Working Group on Wireless Personal Area Networks. The Standards created by P 802. 15 will address the requirements for Wireless Personal Area Networking (WPAN) of PCs, PDAs, peripherals, cell phones, pagers and consumer electronic devices to communicate and interoperate with one another. http: //standards. ieee. org/announcements/802. 15. html Submission 23 Robert F. Heile, GTE