The original paper is in English. Non-English content has been machine-translated and may contain typographical errors or mistranslations. ex. Some numerals are expressed as "XNUMX".
Copyrights notice
The original paper is in English. Non-English content has been machine-translated and may contain typographical errors or mistranslations. Copyrights notice
Le potentiel de Software Radio (SR) a mis du temps à se matérialiser. Né des dépouilles de la Guerre froide, le concept SR est resté prisonnier de son origine, principalement centré sur le terminal, et toujours sous une forte influence militaire. Une perspective aussi étroite ne correspond pas à notre conviction de longue date selon laquelle la RS a un potentiel considérable et une application beaucoup plus large. Alors que certains y voyaient un « simple » affranchissement des standards, en permettant la définition logicielle du terminal radio (d'où Software Defined Radio, SDR), nous y voyons un changement non seulement dans notre façon de penser les systèmes et réseaux radio, mais également la façon dont nous définissons et fournissons les services et adaptons les applications qui s'exécutent dessus. Nous discutons ici de cette approche beaucoup plus large et globale. Alors que l'approche « canonique » du SDR se concentre sur le côté terminal, la nôtre couvre l'ensemble du système, s'étendant à travers le réseau jusqu'à la création de services et le développement d'applications. Au lieu de se contenter de définir la radio dans un logiciel, nous envisageons de reconfigurer à la demande non seulement le terminal mais également le(s) réseau(s) de desserte et les services qu'ils fournissent (d'où les systèmes et réseaux radio reconfigurables). Pour illustrer les aspects de cette nouvelle approche, nous discutons des recherches passées et en cours en Europe sur les systèmes et réseaux radio reconfigurables, et identifions les domaines nécessitant une attention plus approfondie.
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Jorge M. PEREIRA, "Re-Defining Software (Defined) Radio: Re-Configurable Radio Systems and Networks" in IEICE TRANSACTIONS on Communications,
vol. E83-B, no. 6, pp. 1174-1182, June 2000, doi: .
Abstract: The potential of Software Radio (SR) has been slow to materialize. Born out of the spoils of the Cold War, the SR concept has remained prisoner of its origin, mainly focused on the terminal, and still under considerable military influence. Such narrow perspective does not fit with our long held conviction that SR has far-reaching potential, and much broader application. While some saw it as "simply" freeing us from standards, by allowing the definition of the radio terminal in software (hence Software Defined Radio, SDR), we see it as changing not only the way we think radio systems and networks, but also the way we define and provide the services and adapt the applications that ran on top of them. We discuss here this much broader, all encompassing approach. While the "canonical" SDR approach concentrates on the terminal side, ours covers the whole system, extending through the network into service creation and application development. Instead of settling for defining the radio in software, we envision Re-configuring on demand not only the terminal but also the serving network(s) and the services they provide (hence Re-configurable Radio Systems and Networks). To illustrate aspects of this novel approach, we discuss past and ongoing research in Europe on Re-configurable Radio Systems and Networks, and identify areas requiring further attention.
URL: https://global.ieice.org/en_transactions/communications/10.1587/e83-b_6_1174/_p
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@ARTICLE{e83-b_6_1174,
author={Jorge M. PEREIRA, },
journal={IEICE TRANSACTIONS on Communications},
title={Re-Defining Software (Defined) Radio: Re-Configurable Radio Systems and Networks},
year={2000},
volume={E83-B},
number={6},
pages={1174-1182},
abstract={The potential of Software Radio (SR) has been slow to materialize. Born out of the spoils of the Cold War, the SR concept has remained prisoner of its origin, mainly focused on the terminal, and still under considerable military influence. Such narrow perspective does not fit with our long held conviction that SR has far-reaching potential, and much broader application. While some saw it as "simply" freeing us from standards, by allowing the definition of the radio terminal in software (hence Software Defined Radio, SDR), we see it as changing not only the way we think radio systems and networks, but also the way we define and provide the services and adapt the applications that ran on top of them. We discuss here this much broader, all encompassing approach. While the "canonical" SDR approach concentrates on the terminal side, ours covers the whole system, extending through the network into service creation and application development. Instead of settling for defining the radio in software, we envision Re-configuring on demand not only the terminal but also the serving network(s) and the services they provide (hence Re-configurable Radio Systems and Networks). To illustrate aspects of this novel approach, we discuss past and ongoing research in Europe on Re-configurable Radio Systems and Networks, and identify areas requiring further attention.},
keywords={},
doi={},
ISSN={},
month={June},}
Copier
TY - JOUR
TI - Re-Defining Software (Defined) Radio: Re-Configurable Radio Systems and Networks
T2 - IEICE TRANSACTIONS on Communications
SP - 1174
EP - 1182
AU - Jorge M. PEREIRA
PY - 2000
DO -
JO - IEICE TRANSACTIONS on Communications
SN -
VL - E83-B
IS - 6
JA - IEICE TRANSACTIONS on Communications
Y1 - June 2000
AB - The potential of Software Radio (SR) has been slow to materialize. Born out of the spoils of the Cold War, the SR concept has remained prisoner of its origin, mainly focused on the terminal, and still under considerable military influence. Such narrow perspective does not fit with our long held conviction that SR has far-reaching potential, and much broader application. While some saw it as "simply" freeing us from standards, by allowing the definition of the radio terminal in software (hence Software Defined Radio, SDR), we see it as changing not only the way we think radio systems and networks, but also the way we define and provide the services and adapt the applications that ran on top of them. We discuss here this much broader, all encompassing approach. While the "canonical" SDR approach concentrates on the terminal side, ours covers the whole system, extending through the network into service creation and application development. Instead of settling for defining the radio in software, we envision Re-configuring on demand not only the terminal but also the serving network(s) and the services they provide (hence Re-configurable Radio Systems and Networks). To illustrate aspects of this novel approach, we discuss past and ongoing research in Europe on Re-configurable Radio Systems and Networks, and identify areas requiring further attention.
ER -