Announcements

  • Nov 19: Mid-term III to be held in class on Dec 10. Topics include Mobile IP, multi-hop wireless routing, and wireless TCP.
  • Nov 19: Mid-term II to be held in class on Dec 3. Topics include on wireless link layer topics (not including the PCMA paper).
  • Oct 28: Mid-term I can be found here. We might update the details in the questions based on feedback (emails will be sent on the class mailing lists to indicate any changes). Due Nov 02, Friday.
  • Sep 10: Assignment 1 due on Sep 19 (Wednesday, in class).
  • Aug 24: Please attend the first class on Sep 05.

Course Description

Theme: The growing popularity of wireless-enabled mobile devices, such as laptop and palmtop computers, has necessitated extensive research, development, and deployment of wireless communication protocols. Communication over the wireless medium has fundamentally different properties than that over a wired medium, including higher error rates, lower bandwidths, nonuniform transmission characteristics, increased usage costs, increased susceptibility to interference and eavesdropping, and higher variability of performance. Similarly, mobile nodes behave differently and have fundamentally different limitations than stationary nodes. For example, mobile nodes generally operate on limited battery power and may move and change their point of connection to the network. This course will examine the area of mobile and wireless networking, looking at the unique challenges and opportunities presented by wireless communication and host or router mobility to design of networks, systems, and applications.

Contents: The course will commence with a short retrospective of wireless communication and initially touch on some of the fundamental physical layer properties of various wireless communication technologies. The focus will then shift to design of media access control and routing layers for various wireless systems. The course will also examine adaptations necessary at transport and higher layers to cope with node mobility and error-prone nature of the wireless medium. Finally, it will conclude with a brief overview of other related issues including emerging wireless services and wireless security.

Format: Most topics in this course will be covered through readings assigned, many of which will be technical papers. In each class I will lead a discussion on one or two papers. In order to have a discussion, students will be expected to have read one assigned paper prior to each class.

Projects: Each student in the class will be expected to do a project. In the first two classes I will discuss a number of possible projects. However, students are encouraged to define their own ideas for projects. Projects can be a system design and implementation, evaluation of an idea through simulations, or even a survey of a sub-topic. (The survey should include an evaluation component). For each project, a student should submit a written project plan, a summary at the end of the semester and an oral presentation on the project.

The projects are expected to be exploratory in nature and therefore I intend to meet with each student group involved in a project quite frequently.

Syllabus PDF

Required text None.

Reference texts
Wireless Communications and Networks, Second Edition
by William Stallings, Prentice Hall
ISBN 0-13-191835-4.
Mobile Communications, Second Edition (Amazon link)
by Jochen Schiller, Addison Wesley
ISBN 0-321-12381-6.
Computer Networks: A Systems Approach (3rd Edition)
by Larry Peterson and Bruce Davie. Morgan Kaufmann, 2003.
ISBN: 1-55860-832-X
Computer Networking: A Top-Down Approach Featuring the Internet
by Jim Kurose and Keith Ross, Addison-Wesley.
ISBN: 0-201-61274-7
TCP/IP Illustrated, Volume 1
by W. Richard Stevens. Addison-Wesley.
ISBN: 0-201-63346-9

Read for fun
Where Wizards stay up Late
by Katie Hafner and Matthew Lyon. Simon and Schuster.
ISBN: 0-684-83267-4

General Information

Class Time M W F 9.30-10.45am (on average twice a week, see below in meeting frequency)
Room CS 1289
Personnel

Instructor Teaching Assistant
Name Suman Banerjee Dheeraj Agrawal
Email suman@cs.wisc.edu dheeraj@cs.wisc.edu
Office CS 7391 CS 5381
Office hours after class TBA

Class Mailing List compsci707-1-f07@lists.wisc.edu
Final Exam TBA

Handouts

Assignments will be due at the start of class on the due date. Late assignments will not be accepted, so turn in whatever you have done.

Handout Handed Out Comments Solutions
Course Overview and Syllabus

Assignments

Lectures

The readings indicated are from the reading list.

Meeting frequency: Early in the semester the class will meet thrice a week. This will help you see some initial material relevant for course projects. However, towards the latter part of the semester we will meet only once a week, especially to give you more time to work on your projects. Averaged over the entire semester, the class will have met twice a week (total meeting time over the entire semester will be no different from other usual courses).

Reading assignments: For each class, I will assign at most one paper that you will be required to have read prior to the class. This is mandatory for each student. A part of your course grade will depend on participation in class discussions. Therefore, please make sure that you keep up with the readings.

Reading groups: To help yourself prepare for each class, you should form reading groups of 3-4 members each. The goal of the reading group would be to meet prior to class and discuss the paper assigned for the corresponding class meeting.

Week Date Topic Reading Background Notes 5-min speaker
1 Sep 05, Wed Course Introduction
Sep 07, Fri Projects, Basic Wireless Ch. 2, Stallings, class notes
2 Sep 10, Mon No class
Sep 12, Wed No class
Sep 14, Fri Basic Wireless
3 Sep 17, Mon Intro to MadWiFi
Sep 19, Wed - cont'd -
Sep 21, Fri Basic wireless
4 Sep 24, Mon No class
Sep 26, Wed Basic wireless
Sep 28, Fri 802.11 basics, MACA, MACAW [K90], [BDSZ94]
5 Oct 1, Mon Power control PCMA [MVH01]
Oct 3, Wed Rate control OAR [SKSK02], RRAA [WLYB06]
Oct 5, Fri - cont'd -
6 Oct 8, Mon - cont'd - Renata
Oct 10, Wed No class
Oct 12, Fri Joe
7 Oct 15, Mon Shikha
Oct 17, Wed Directional MAC [RV04, RV05] Phil
Oct 19, Fri Mobile IP [Per98,CB96] Chris
8 Oct 22, Mon Joel
Oct 24, Wed No class
Oct 26, Fri Routing [BPJHJ98] Bryan
9 Oct 29, Mon No class (Mid-term I announced)
Oct 31, Wed Routing metrics [DPZ04] Pat
Nov 2, Fri
10 Nov 5, Mon
Nov 7, Wed Mid-sem presentations
Nov, 9, Fri - cont'd -
11 Nov 12, Mon Wireless TCP [BPSK96]
Nov 14, Wed No class
Nov 16, Fri No class
12 Nov 19, Mon Wireless management
Nov 21, Wed - cont'd -
Nov 23, Fri
13 Nov 26, Mon Wireless TCP - cont'd -
Nov 28, Wed No class (please attend dist. lecture)
Nov 30, Fri No class
14 Dec 3, Mon In-class mid-term

Project WiKis: Following are the Wikis for the different projects in this class. - Phil and Chris / WiMAX on reconfigurable platform - Yadi and Shuhua / Directional antenna - Jongwon and Mike / 802.11e - Renata and Suyong - Smart rule cache - Cellular measurements - Shan-hsiang Shen - Shikha Dhir

Final meetings: Following are the end of semester meeting times for the class. Please see instructions in email.

Dec 17, Mon - [2pm: Sayandeep], [2.30pm: Bryan], [3pm: Shan-Hsiang Shen] [3.30pm: Chris and Phil]

Dec 19, Wed - [1.30pm: Yadi and Shuhua], [2pm: Renata and Su Yong], [2.30pm: Pat], [3pm: Shikha], [3.30pm: Joel]

Dec 20, Thu - [2pm: Jordan], [2.30pm: Mike and Jongwon] [4pm: Chris and Phil]

 
start.txt · Last modified: 2007/12/20 16:31 by suman
 
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