Principles of Performance Engineering for Telecommunication and Information Systems
The term 'teletraffic engineering' has been used since the early days of the century to describe the design of switched telecommunications networks in terms of probabilities. More recent advances in queuing theory, and the growing realisation that the basic techniques can be applied to many other aspects of system design, has led to an extension of the subject and to the term 'performance engineering'.

This book describes the basic theory of performance engineering and its application to both circuit- and packet-switched systems. For the increasing number of systems that are too complex to be analysed by theoretical methods, an introduction is given to simulation techniques. Other applications such as reliability, tolerances and the system implications of radio fading are covered, and the principles of design are discussed in terms of the basic theory.

Final-year undergraduate and postgraduate students will find the text useful in relation to a wide range of systems, as will practising telecommunication engineers. The book will also be of interest to telecommunication managers who are more interested in system performance than in detailed hardware and software design.

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Principles of Performance Engineering for Telecommunication and Information Systems
The term 'teletraffic engineering' has been used since the early days of the century to describe the design of switched telecommunications networks in terms of probabilities. More recent advances in queuing theory, and the growing realisation that the basic techniques can be applied to many other aspects of system design, has led to an extension of the subject and to the term 'performance engineering'.

This book describes the basic theory of performance engineering and its application to both circuit- and packet-switched systems. For the increasing number of systems that are too complex to be analysed by theoretical methods, an introduction is given to simulation techniques. Other applications such as reliability, tolerances and the system implications of radio fading are covered, and the principles of design are discussed in terms of the basic theory.

Final-year undergraduate and postgraduate students will find the text useful in relation to a wide range of systems, as will practising telecommunication engineers. The book will also be of interest to telecommunication managers who are more interested in system performance than in detailed hardware and software design.

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Principles of Performance Engineering for Telecommunication and Information Systems

Principles of Performance Engineering for Telecommunication and Information Systems

Principles of Performance Engineering for Telecommunication and Information Systems

Principles of Performance Engineering for Telecommunication and Information Systems

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Overview

The term 'teletraffic engineering' has been used since the early days of the century to describe the design of switched telecommunications networks in terms of probabilities. More recent advances in queuing theory, and the growing realisation that the basic techniques can be applied to many other aspects of system design, has led to an extension of the subject and to the term 'performance engineering'.

This book describes the basic theory of performance engineering and its application to both circuit- and packet-switched systems. For the increasing number of systems that are too complex to be analysed by theoretical methods, an introduction is given to simulation techniques. Other applications such as reliability, tolerances and the system implications of radio fading are covered, and the principles of design are discussed in terms of the basic theory.

Final-year undergraduate and postgraduate students will find the text useful in relation to a wide range of systems, as will practising telecommunication engineers. The book will also be of interest to telecommunication managers who are more interested in system performance than in detailed hardware and software design.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780863416392
Publisher: The Institution of Engineering and Technology
Publication date: 06/30/1997
Series: Telecommunications
Pages: 340
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x (d)

About the Author

Mohammed Ghanbari received an MSc in Telecommunications and a Ph.D. in Electronics from the Universityof Essex. After almost 10 years' experience in radio and television broadcasting, he joined the Electronic Systems Engineering (ESE) Department at the Universityof Essex in 1986.


Charles Hughes was a deputy director of the British Telecom Laboratories until 1985 and then a professor of Telecommunications at the Universityof Essex until his retirement in 1993. Since then he has continued to carry out consultancy and research work, together with occasional lecturing.


Mark Sinclair received an MA in Electrical Sciences from Pembroke College, Cambridge, and an MSc in Telecommunication and Information Systems from the Universityof Essex. After six years working on System X at Plessey and GPT, he joined the ESE Department at the Universityof Essex in 1991.


Julian Eade graduated from Oxford and was awarded MSc and Ph.D. degrees in Mathematics from the Universityof Essex. He lectured in the ESE Department at the Universityof Essex until 1991, when he set up his own consultancy.

Table of Contents

  • Chapter 1: Introduction
  • Chapter 2: Analytical methods
  • Chapter 3: Simulation methods
  • Chapter 4: Queuing systems
  • Chapter 5: Queuing networks
  • Chapter 6: Switched systems
  • Chapter 7: Packet networks
  • Chapter 8: Introduction to reliability
  • Chapter 9: Miscellaneous examples of performance engineering
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