Bluetooth is a wireless ad-hoc network concept that was presented in February 1998 by its five original promoters Ericsson, Nokia, IBM, Toshiba and Intel. With Bluetooth, mobile terminals within range of each other can set up ad-hoc connections for both synchronous traffic, e.g. voice, and asynchronous traffic, e.g. IP-based data traffic. In this paper we analyse how well Bluetooth can carry TCP/IP traffic and in particular we show that though the radio channel is very disturbed the TCP Vegas protocol with its flow control mechanism can be carried very well. With ARQ handled at the Bluetooth level, retransmissions are made immediately after a packet error and thus the delays, normally introduced are kept acceptably short. In our model impor...
A major challenge for the WLAN technology stems from having to share the 2.4 G Hz ISM band with othe...
In this paper we explore the ability to support multimedia traffic in indoor, wireless ad hoc PANs (...
The increasing use of Wireless technologies suggest that this kind of technology has a bright future...
Recent updates of the Bluetooth specification to version 1.2 have introduced significant changes in ...
Abstract — TCP throughput limitations over wireless links have received considerable attention in th...
TCP performance over wireless links has been a research focus for quite a few years. TCP has been de...
Recent updates of the Bluetooth specification have introduced significant changes in the Bluetooth p...
TCP is the current dominant transport protocol, mainly used in fixed networks. It is well-known that...
TCP is the current dominant transport protocol, mainly used in fixed networks. It is well-known that...
This paper discusses new protocols for mobile ad hoc networks to connect Bluetooth with wireless LAN...
The number of devices making use of Bluetooth cable-replacement technology has rapidly increased in ...
TCP/IP has recently taken promising steps toward being a viable communication architecture for netwo...
TCP/IP has recently taken promising steps toward being a viable communication architecture for netwo...
TCP/IP has recently taken promising steps toward being a viable communication architecture for netwo...
We investigate issues that Bluetooth may face in evolving from a simple wire replacement to a large-...
A major challenge for the WLAN technology stems from having to share the 2.4 G Hz ISM band with othe...
In this paper we explore the ability to support multimedia traffic in indoor, wireless ad hoc PANs (...
The increasing use of Wireless technologies suggest that this kind of technology has a bright future...
Recent updates of the Bluetooth specification to version 1.2 have introduced significant changes in ...
Abstract — TCP throughput limitations over wireless links have received considerable attention in th...
TCP performance over wireless links has been a research focus for quite a few years. TCP has been de...
Recent updates of the Bluetooth specification have introduced significant changes in the Bluetooth p...
TCP is the current dominant transport protocol, mainly used in fixed networks. It is well-known that...
TCP is the current dominant transport protocol, mainly used in fixed networks. It is well-known that...
This paper discusses new protocols for mobile ad hoc networks to connect Bluetooth with wireless LAN...
The number of devices making use of Bluetooth cable-replacement technology has rapidly increased in ...
TCP/IP has recently taken promising steps toward being a viable communication architecture for netwo...
TCP/IP has recently taken promising steps toward being a viable communication architecture for netwo...
TCP/IP has recently taken promising steps toward being a viable communication architecture for netwo...
We investigate issues that Bluetooth may face in evolving from a simple wire replacement to a large-...
A major challenge for the WLAN technology stems from having to share the 2.4 G Hz ISM band with othe...
In this paper we explore the ability to support multimedia traffic in indoor, wireless ad hoc PANs (...
The increasing use of Wireless technologies suggest that this kind of technology has a bright future...