While packet scheduling for wired links is a maturing area, scheduling of wireless links is less mature. A fundamental difference between wired and wireless links is that wireless media can exhibit substantial rates of link errors, resulting in significant and unpredictable loss of link capacity. This capacity loss results in a special challenge for wireless schedulers. For example, a weighted fair queue (WFQ) scheduler assumes an error free link and specifies how flows should share the link capacity. However, this specification is not sufficient to determine the correct outcome when link capacity is sharply reduced, because flows that have been allocated the same weights may differ greatly in their ability to tolerate throughput loss. In...
[[abstract]]Wireless networks are characterized by bursty and location-dependent errors. Although ma...
Wireless fair queueing algorithms have been extensively studied recently. However, a major drawback ...
This paper proposes that fairness in wireless networks should be measured using one of the following...
While packet scheduling for wired links is a maturing area, scheduling of wireless links is less mat...
In this paper we propose a novel wireless scheduling algorithm for delay-sensitive (DS) and best-eff...
Since their arrival in the late 90's wireless packet schedulers have sought to seamlessly re-apply t...
Abstract Fair scheduling of delay and rate-sensitive packet flows over a wireless channel is not add...
communication system, scheduling, wireless network. Wireless channels are characterized by more seri...
[[abstract]]Wireless networks are characterized by bursty and location-dependent errors. Although ma...
Abstract. To provide scheduling in wireless ad hoc networks, that is both highly efficient and fair ...
Abstract-In order to support relatively differentiated QoS requirement over time-varying shared wire...
The increasing number of wireless data users and the deployment of broadband wireless networks have ...
With the advent of the IEEE 802.11 wireless networks that provide high speed connectivity, demand fo...
Wireless networks are characterized by bursty and location-dependent errors. Although many fair sche...
[[abstract]]Wireless networks are characterized by bursty and location-dependent errors. Although ma...
[[abstract]]Wireless networks are characterized by bursty and location-dependent errors. Although ma...
Wireless fair queueing algorithms have been extensively studied recently. However, a major drawback ...
This paper proposes that fairness in wireless networks should be measured using one of the following...
While packet scheduling for wired links is a maturing area, scheduling of wireless links is less mat...
In this paper we propose a novel wireless scheduling algorithm for delay-sensitive (DS) and best-eff...
Since their arrival in the late 90's wireless packet schedulers have sought to seamlessly re-apply t...
Abstract Fair scheduling of delay and rate-sensitive packet flows over a wireless channel is not add...
communication system, scheduling, wireless network. Wireless channels are characterized by more seri...
[[abstract]]Wireless networks are characterized by bursty and location-dependent errors. Although ma...
Abstract. To provide scheduling in wireless ad hoc networks, that is both highly efficient and fair ...
Abstract-In order to support relatively differentiated QoS requirement over time-varying shared wire...
The increasing number of wireless data users and the deployment of broadband wireless networks have ...
With the advent of the IEEE 802.11 wireless networks that provide high speed connectivity, demand fo...
Wireless networks are characterized by bursty and location-dependent errors. Although many fair sche...
[[abstract]]Wireless networks are characterized by bursty and location-dependent errors. Although ma...
[[abstract]]Wireless networks are characterized by bursty and location-dependent errors. Although ma...
Wireless fair queueing algorithms have been extensively studied recently. However, a major drawback ...
This paper proposes that fairness in wireless networks should be measured using one of the following...