CDMA Capacity and Quality Optimization
Publisher's Note: Products purchased from Third Party sellers are not guaranteed by the publisher for quality, authenticity, or access to any online entitlements included with the product.




Now that CDMA has been accepted as a key component of worldwide 3G systems, service providers, capacity planners, engineers and technicians need to understand the best methods and tools for maximizing throughput, capacity, and quality. This book provides that expertise.
1147888775
CDMA Capacity and Quality Optimization
Publisher's Note: Products purchased from Third Party sellers are not guaranteed by the publisher for quality, authenticity, or access to any online entitlements included with the product.




Now that CDMA has been accepted as a key component of worldwide 3G systems, service providers, capacity planners, engineers and technicians need to understand the best methods and tools for maximizing throughput, capacity, and quality. This book provides that expertise.
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CDMA Capacity and Quality Optimization

CDMA Capacity and Quality Optimization

by Adam N. Rosenberg, Sid Kemp
CDMA Capacity and Quality Optimization

CDMA Capacity and Quality Optimization

by Adam N. Rosenberg, Sid Kemp

Hardcover

$95.00 
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Overview

Publisher's Note: Products purchased from Third Party sellers are not guaranteed by the publisher for quality, authenticity, or access to any online entitlements included with the product.




Now that CDMA has been accepted as a key component of worldwide 3G systems, service providers, capacity planners, engineers and technicians need to understand the best methods and tools for maximizing throughput, capacity, and quality. This book provides that expertise.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780071399197
Publisher: McGraw Hill LLC
Publication date: 02/25/2003
Series: Telecom Engineering Series
Pages: 627
Product dimensions: 7.60(w) x 9.30(h) x 2.00(d)

About the Author

Adam N. Rosenberg is an industrial mathematician who has worked in wireless and landline telephony, airline planning, railroad line optimization, used car value prediction, printed circuit board design and manufacture, image processing of flood plain maps, and, currently, hotel revenue management. He worked with the cellular founders at Bell Telephone Laboratories on Advanced Mobile Phone Service (AMPS) and, more recently, on Broadband Code Division Multiple Access (B-CDMA) at InterDigital Communications Corporation. Dr. Rosenberg earned his A.B. in Mathematics from Princeton University, cum laude, and his M.S. and Ph.D. in Operations Research from Stanford University. He can be reached at adam@the-adam.com

Sid Kemp is an expert in architecture, standards, quality management, and organizational structure for information technology and telecommunications. As president of Quality Technology & Instruction (QTI), he provides clients with consulting and training that increase quality of service especially by improving teamwork between technical engineers and business experts and executives. He appreciates comments on his writing and can be reached at sid@qualitytechnology.com. For updates and additional information about this book, see his corporate Web site, www.qualitytechnology.com/qti/cdma.

Sid Kemp (San Antonio, TX), is a leading expert in project management for information technology and telecommunications implementations. His company, Quality Technology and Instruction, provides a custom project management methodology to businesses, government agencies, and educational organizations. He has assisted Fortune 500 companies and government agencies in the deployment of new technology, and developing custom project management methodologies. Mr. Kemp has more than 15 years of experience in IT and telecommunications, and has authored 5 textbooks for use in courses and corporations. He has been teaching a seminar on Project Management for Information Technology for three years.

Table of Contents

Section 1: KEY RADIO CONCEPTSChapter 1: Radio Engineering ConceptsChapter 2: The User TerminalChapter 3: The CDMA Mobile SystemChapter 4: The Base StationChapter 5: Basic Wireless TelephonyChapter 6: Analog Wireless Telephony (AMPS)Chapter 7: TDMA Wireless Telephony (GSM)Chapter 8: The CDMA Principle
Section 2: STANDARDS FOR CELLULAR SYSTEMSChapter 9: General Cellular StandardsChapter 10: Worldwide CDMA Standards
Section 3: KEY TELEPHONE CONCEPTSChapter 11: The PSTN and Telephone SwitchingChapter 12: Telephony Engineering ConceptsChapter 13: Telephone TransportChapter 14: Signaling with SS7Chapter 15: ANSI-41Chapter 16: Call States
Section 4: KEY DATA CONCEPTSChapter 17: Quality of Service (QoS)Chapter 18: Speech CodingChapter 19: Hybrid Voice-Data NetworksChapter 20: Short Message Service (SMS)Chapter 21: Wireless Data Service
Section 5: CAPACITY AND QUALITY PRINCIPLESChapter 22: Capacity and Quality TradeoffsChapter 23: Traffic Engineering for Voice and DataChapter 24: Switching CapacityChapter 25: ANSI-41 Signaling CapacityChapter 26: Capacity Calculations for Cellular NetworksChapter 27: Conventional Reuse PrinciplesChapter 28: CDMA Principles for Multicellular SystemsChapter 29: CDMA Data Capacity PrinciplesChapter 30: Capacity Issues Specific to CDMA
Section 6: PLANNING FOR CDMA CAPACITYChapter 31: Estimating Wireless Telephone DemandChapter 32: Planning Locations for Base StationsChapter 33: Base Station PlanningChapter 34: Mobile Switching Center (MSC) PlanningChapter 35: Backhaul PlanningChapter 36: Signaling Capacity PlanningChapter 37: MSC Transport PlanningChapter 38: Special Situations
Section 7: INCREASING CAPACITYChapter 39: Measuring System Performance for GrowthChapter 40: Turning Your Complaints into Useful DataChapter 41: Increasing Capacity of a Base StationChapter 42: Adding Cells to a CDMA StationChapter 43: Mobile Switching Center (MSC) GrowthChapter 44: Adding TransportChapter 45: Regional Growth in a Specific Area
Section 8: MODELING FOR CDMAChapter 46: Business-Case ModelsChapter 47: Propagation ModelsChapter 48: Subscriber Traffic Modeling
Section 9: CONCLUSIONChapter 49: CDMA Now and in the FutureAppendix A: AcronymsAppendix B: Physical UnitsGlossaryReferencesIndexAbout the Authors
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