GPRS in Practice: A Companion to the Specifications
Author | : | |
Rating | : | 4.74 (913 Votes) |
Asin | : | 0470095075 |
Format Type | : | paperback |
Number of Pages | : | 394 Pages |
Publish Date | : | 2015-10-06 |
Language | : | English |
DESCRIPTION:
By beginning with an explanation of why GPRS is necessary and describing the core concept of GPRS operations, the TBF (Temporary Block Flow), a revision section then covers the GSM Air Interface with its Radio, Physical and Logical channels and this progressively leads to the GPRS logical channels - what they do and how they do it. The book then moves on to a brief introduction of the GPRS protocol stack which provides a launch pad for a detailed trip into all the layers of this stack, with detailed diagrams and explanations of each layer integrated into an overall understanding of how
From the Back Cover GPRS is now an established technology allowing packet-data access to the internet and intranets and it is expected that consumer demand for the service will continue to increase, especially when the higher data rates are made available. The GPRS technology is also carried forward to the 3G systems and it is vital that engineers working in the GSM/3G engineering fields understand the GPRS technology.The specifications are the source for the technology, but in general the specifications provide exactly that - specifications and not explanations! With this in mind, GPRS in Practice is written in a simple manner using simple language allowing the reader to fully understand the complex
GPRS I didn't like this book at all, and this is from somebody who knows the subject. To me it looks more like initial books on GSM subject in 1990 where a bunch of copy paste stuff are included to fill pages and pages with no sense.The writing style is also bad, I think people would gain in having good technology books that use English and high analytic mind to layout such important technology.Unfortunately this trend of who is g
Peter McGuiggan has worked in telecommunications for the past forty years. He has held a variety of positions such as development test-engineer for a telecommunications manufacturer, an engineer working on fixed line international telecommunications systems including satellite, microwave and line transmission systems and as a lecturer in radio systems and adva