Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- About the author
- 1 The world of machine communications
- 2 The need for a new standard
- 3 Working in white space spectrum
- 4 Weightless in overview
- 5 The network
- 6 The MAC layer
- 7 The physical layer
- 8 Further functionality
- 9 Network design and capacity
- 10 Application support
- 11 In closing
- Glossary
- Index
Preface
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 April 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- About the author
- 1 The world of machine communications
- 2 The need for a new standard
- 3 Working in white space spectrum
- 4 Weightless in overview
- 5 The network
- 6 The MAC layer
- 7 The physical layer
- 8 Further functionality
- 9 Network design and capacity
- 10 Application support
- 11 In closing
- Glossary
- Index
Summary
This book is a guide to the Weightless technology. The definitive documentation for Weightless is the Weightless standard as published by the Weightless SIG and this book in no way is intended as an alternative. However, standards documents are not designed for readability and it is often helpful to start with a more descriptive text. This book is designed to explain the context for Weightless, the key design decisions and to provide a readable overview to the standard. That may be sufficient for some, and for those that will go on to read the standard they will better understand the details that they find there.
This book was written to accompany version 0.6 of the standard. This is referred to throughout the book simply as the standard. Of course, this standard will evolve and it is envisaged that this book will be updated to accompany major revisions to the standard.
Why the name ‘Weightless’? Like many standards such as Zigbee and Bluetooth, the name chosen is often more whimsy than descriptive. In this case, it came indirectly from making the point that this was not a new generation of cellular standard, measured in generations (2G, 3G …). Indeed, it was outside of this generation pattern and so perhaps zero-G. Zero-G is often associated with no gravity leading to weightlessness … At the time it was conceived most thought that a different name would emerge during the early standardisation process, but as is often the case names acquire a momentum all of their own, even those that have no weight.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Understanding WeightlessTechnology, Equipment, and Network Deployment for M2M Communications in White Space, pp. xiPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2012