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Table 4.1: Wireless Mesh Networks Literature Review # of Ch. # of SDs Obj. Rout. CA Sch. Radio # of Rad.
2006
TABLE I Throughput enhancement in multi-radio, multi-channel 802.11a based wireless mesh networks, as a function of path length. The notation H in the first column of the table represents the path length (hop count). Columns 2 and 3 show the observed throughputs (in packets/sec) for the single radio, single channel case and the 2-radios, 4-channel case respectively. Column 4 shows the percent improvement when 2 radios and 4 channels are available, compared to the single radio, single channel case.
2005
Cited by 2
Table 1: Links between core mesh nodes
"... In PAGE 1: ... MULTI-RADIO MESH NETWORK The metropolitan mesh network covers an area of approx- imately 60 Km2 and currently contains 14 nodes, Figure 2, among which six are core mesh nodes, whose design was discussed in the previous section. The distance and anten- nas used for the links between core mesh nodes2 are shown in Table1 . Each wireless interface is assigned a static IP address, and the OLSR protocol is used for routing traffic in the network.... ..."
Table 7 Wireless network.
Table 1. Wireless network characteristics
"... In PAGE 10: ... Different wireless networks have different values for the above parameters and we an- alyze the performance of the different transport mechanisms across varying values of the above-mentioned parameters. We use the values given in Table1 for the different wireless data networks. The data rate is the average bandwidth that the wireless link supports; the fluctuation period is the frequency at which the bandwidth varies (the magnitude of variation is 30% of the mean bandwidth of the link) - the fluctuation pe- riod is represented as the percentage of the delay of the link; the packet loss rate is the average drop rate of the uniform loss module.... ..."
Table 1: Wireless network parameters
"... In PAGE 5: ...Table 1: Wireless network parameters In all test cases, off-the-self wireless network hardware interfaces and an access point were employed, operating at their maximum supported rate (54Mbps), while typical CD-audio material was transmitted, for intervals of 60 seconds per sequence. As shown in Table1 , apart from the networking mode, several different networking parameters were considered such as: (a) the length of the transmitted audio packets and (b) the number of packets per playback buffer block. 4.... ..."
Table 1. Characteristics of the Wireless Networks
2001
Cited by 18
Table 1. Wireless data access in heterogeneous wireless network standards.
2005
"... In PAGE 35: ....2.3 Heterogeneous access networks There have been a wide variety of wireless access network technologies developed during the past decade. As described in Table1 , wireless data access can be provided over heterogeneous wireless networks [17]. Some of the wireless network standards have aimed at specific market regions such as North-America, Europe and Asia, especially in cellular networks.... In PAGE 37: ... However, the practical performance of these cellular data systems is usually much lower than the nominal rates, even down to ten times lower than the nominal rate [22]. As shown in Table1 , wireless local and personal area networking standards include IEEE 802.... In PAGE 39: ...ominated by 802.11 standards. In addition, the lack of end-to-end QoS support in the public Internet so far may have lowered the interest for providing QoS support in the local access network. As illustrated in Table1 , there are a wide variety of wireless networks, and many local and personal area standards have emerged. However, whatever the used WLAN system is, it is providing service only locally .... ..."
Table 1. Typical wireless network performance parameters
"... In PAGE 3: ...1 Categories of Wireless Networks There are several different scales of wireless networks. Table1 summarizes the... ..."
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