3G (third generation
of mobile telephony)
3G refers to the third generation of mobile
telephony (that is, cellular) technology. The third generation, as the name
suggests, follows two earlier generations.
The first generation (1G) began in the early 80's
with commercial deployment of Advanced Mobile Phone Service (AMPS) cellular
networks. Early AMPS networks used Frequency Division Multiplexing Access
(FDMA) to carry analog voice over channels in the 800 MHz frequency band.
The second generation (2G) emerged in the 90's
when mobile operators deployed two competing digital voice standards. In North
America, some operators adopted IS-95, which used Code Division Multiple Access
(CDMA) to multiplex up to 64 calls per channel in the 800 MHz band. Across the
world, many operators adopted the Global System for Mobile communication (GSM)
standard, which used Time Division Multiple Access (TDMA) to multiplex up to 8
calls per channel in the 900 and 1800 MHz bands.
The International Telecommunications Union (ITU)
defined the third generation (3G) of mobile telephony standards IMT-2000 to
facilitate growth, increase bandwidth, and support more diverse applications.
For example, GSM could deliver not only voice, but also circuit-switched data
at speeds up to 14.4 Kbps. But to support mobile multimedia applications, 3G
had to deliver packet-switched data with better spectral efficiency, at far
greater speeds.
However, to get from 2G to 3G, mobile operators
had make "evolutionary" upgrades to existing networks while
simultaneously planning their "revolutionary" new mobile broadband
networks. This lead to the establishment of two distinct 3G families: 3GPP and
3GPP2.
The 3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP) was
formed in 1998 to foster deployment of 3G networks that descended from GSM.
3GPP technologies evolved as follows.
• General Packet Radio Service (GPRS) offered
speeds up to 114 Kbps.
• Enhanced Data Rates for Global Evolution (EDGE)
reached up to 384 Kbps.
• UMTS Wideband CDMA (WCDMA) offered downlink
speeds up to 1.92 Mbps.
• High Speed Downlink Packet Access (HSDPA)
boosted the downlink to 14Mbps.
• LTE Evolved UMTS Terrestrial Radio Access
(E-UTRA) is aiming for 100 Mbps.
GPRS deployments began in 2000, followed by EDGE
in 2003. While these technologies are defined by IMT-2000, they are sometimes
called "2.5G" because they did not offer multi-megabit data rates.
EDGE has now been superceded by HSDPA (and its uplink partner HSUPA). According
to the 3GPP, there were 166 HSDPA networks in 75 countries at the end of 2007.
The next step for GSM operators: LTE E-UTRA, based on specifications completed
in late 2008.
A second organization, the 3rd Generation
Partnership Project 2 (3GPP2) -- was formed to help North American and Asian
operators using CDMA2000 transition to 3G. 3GPP2 technologies evolved as
follows.
• One Times Radio Transmission Technology (1xRTT)
offered speeds up to 144 Kbps.
• Evolution Data Optimized (EV-DO) increased
downlink speeds up to 2.4 Mbps.
• EV-DO Rev. A boosted downlink peak speed to 3.1
Mbps and reduced latency.
• EV-DO Rev. B can use 2 to 15 channels, with each
downlink peaking at 4.9 Mbps.
• Ultra Mobile Broadband (UMB) was slated to reach
288 Mbps on the downlink.
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