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ITU-T Special Study Group IMT-2000 and Beyond

ITU-T Special Study Group IMT-2000 and Beyond. Chairman: John Visser Nortel Networks (Canada). Contents. Terms of reference 3 Management Team 7 SG Organization 9 Statistics 11 Highlights of achievements 14 Workshops and Seminars 19 Future work 20 Conclusions 22.

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ITU-T Special Study Group IMT-2000 and Beyond

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  1. ITU-T Special Study GroupIMT-2000 and Beyond Chairman: John Visser Nortel Networks (Canada)

  2. Contents • Terms of reference 3 • Management Team 7 • SG Organization 9 • Statistics 11 • Highlights of achievements 14 • Workshops and Seminars 19 • Future work 20 • Conclusions 22

  3. Terms of Reference - General • WTSA-2000 Res. 2 - General Areas of Study: • Responsible for studies relating to network aspects of IMT-2000 and beyond, including wireless Internet, convergence of mobile and fixed networks, mobility management, mobile multimedia functions, internetworking, interoperability and enhancements to existing ITU T Recommendations on IMT-2000.

  4. Terms of Reference - Lead SG • WTSA-2000 Res. 2 - Lead Study Group: • IMT-2000 and beyond • Mobility

  5. Terms of Reference - Guidance • WTSA-2000 Res. 2 - Points of guidance: • Collaborate with ITU R WP 8F • Assist developing countries in consultation with ITU-D • Investigate and recommend modifications to Provisional Working Procedures (Rec. A.9) • Maintain strong cooperative relations with external SDOs and 3GPPs to allow for normative referencing in ITU T Recs. of mobile network specifications developed by those organizations • 4 Questions assigned but recognized as needing re-work within SSG

  6. Applying the Res. 2 Guidance EMPHASIS ON: • Collaboration • Cooperation • Partnering BUT NOT: • Duplicationof work Revolution from IP infrastructure and Beyond 3G Evolution from 2G systems 2G Revolution from subscriber service expectations

  7. SSG Management Team • Larger than usual • Strength in diversity: • viewpoints from vendors, operators and regulators • viewpoints from developed and developing countries

  8. SSG Management Team

  9. Study Group Organization • SSG originally met as three WPs: • WP 1: Service and Interface requirements for IMT 2000 and Beyond (2 Questions) • WP 2: Application and Interworking of IMT 2000 Systems (3 Questions) • WP 3: Harmonization and Convergence of IMT 2000 Systems (2 Questions) • Nov 2002: discussed efficiency • flatten organization: no WPs and Rapporteurs to report directly to the closing plenary • Q.8/SSG always met separately

  10. SSG Work Structure: 8 Qs End user experience consistency Inter-system mobility management SSG Key future core network characteristics Q.2 & Q.6/SSGMobility Mgmt & Harmonization For consideration by: Q.1/SSGVision Operator Inputs Q.3/SSGID Systems Q.7/SSGConvergence Q.5/SSGHandbook Leveraging infrastructure Globalize regional solutions Q.8/SSGProcedures Work completed, passed to TSAG Helping the decision process Q.4/SSGInterworking No inputs

  11. Statistics (I) - Documents • 8 SG meetings and 1 WP meeting • 32 Rapporteurs meetings • 10 face-to-face • 16 electronic • 6 conference calls • Approx. 1800 documents handled: • 230 (220 delayed) contributions to SSG meetings • 1006 TDs at SSG meetings (excluding revisions) • 552 documents at Rapporteur Meetings

  12. Statistics (II) - Participation Dec 2000 Geneva May 2001 Geneva Aug 2001 Rio de Janeiro May 2002 Ottawa Nov 2002 Geneva Jun 2003 Geneva Nov 2003 Geneva Apr 2004 Moscow

  13. Statistics (III) • 9new Recommendations approved • 4 Questions assigned by WTSA-2000 • 8 new or revised Questions developed during study period • 5 Questions proposed for next period • continuation of established work • no inputs: drop topic • recommend any future work on working procedures, types of deliverable, etc., be assigned to TSAG, not a technical study group

  14. Highlights of achievements (I) • Overcame early resistance to taking any substantive role in 3G mobile networks • Established strong relationships: • ITU-R WP 8F • ITU-D BDT and Q.18/2 • 3GPP and its OPs • 3GPP2 and its OPs • initiated ITU relationship with OMA

  15. Highlights of achievements (II) • ITU-R WP 8F: coordinated and consistent vision for future: • ITU-R Rec. M.1645 “Framework and overall objectives of the future development of IMT-2000 and systems beyond IMT-2000” • ITU-T Rec. Q.1702 “Long-termvision of network aspects forsystems beyond IMT-2000” • ITU-T Rec. Q.1703 “Service andNetwork Capabilities Frameworkof Network Aspects for Systems Beyond IMT-2000”

  16. Highlights of achievements (III) • ITU-D Q.18/2 • Close cooperation with BDT on Handbook on “Deployment of IMT-2000 Systems” • Supported Q.18/2 work on development of “Guidelines on the Smooth Transition of Existing Mobile Networks to IMT-2000 for Developing Countries”

  17. Highlights of achievements (IV) • Globalization of 3G • 3GPP: ITU-T Recs. in Q.1741-series:“IMT-2000 references to release 99, 4, 5of GSM evolved UMTS core network” • 3GPP2: ITU-T Recs. in Q.1742-series:“IMT-2000 references (approved as of mid-2002, 2003, 2004) to ANSI-41 evolved core network with cdma2000 access network”

  18. Highlights of achievements (V) • OMA • SSG initiated relationship with ITU-T • IPR policy issue for referencing under Recs. A.4, A.5 resolved: • OK to reference all OMA specifications approved after 31 Dec 2004 • will need to do case-by-case consultation to verify referencing for earlier specifications

  19. Workshops & Seminars • Seminar: “IMT-2000 and Beyond Systems” • 6 Sep 2001 / Rio de Janeiro / ~180 participants • Seminar: “IMT-2000 and Systems Beyond” • 28 May 2003 / Ottawa / ~300 participants • Workshop: "Next Generation Networks: What, When and How? Encompassing Services, Transport Convergence, mobility issues and more...” (with SGs 11, 13) • 9-11 Jul 2003 / Geneva / ~177 participants

  20. Future Work (I) • Mobility is a key dimension of future telecommunications • mobile subscribers outnumber fixed subscribers • technology advances mean more capability at less cost than ever before • Promote harmonizationof IMT-2000 Family members • mobility management a key area and opportunity • increased interoperability and compatibility

  21. Future Work (II) • Continue globalization of regional efforts • through effective cooperation and collaboration • Promoteconvergence of mobile and fixed networks as part of NGN studies • mobile no longer just another access technology • Support for developing countries • Handbook, Guidelines, Seminars, Workshops

  22. Conclusion • SSG has re-established ITU-T as a 3G player, but there is more to be done • ITU-T future: Next Generation Networks • must address all dimensions to achieve implementable and deployable results • architecture, signalling, mobilityneed to be strongly connected and coordinated • opportunity for WTSA to set up structure and mandates to support success of NGN studies

  23. John Visser, P.Eng.Chairman ITU-T SSG John Visser earned a degree in Electrical Engineering from the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada in 1973. He joined Bell-Northern Research, then the R&D arm of Nortel Networks, in 1978. He has worked on network systems engineering, planning, product design, and product line management support, and has an extensive background in SS7, ISDN, Intelligent Networks and mobile networks. John has experience in ANSI T1, TIA, ITU-T, and the 3G Partnership Projects. He is a member of the Advisory Board of the Advanced Software Engineering Research and Training (ASERT) Laboratories at the University of Ottawa and Carleton University, a regular guest lecturer on Telecommunications at Carleton University, and a frequent speaker at conferences and seminars. John is a Registered Professional Engineer in the province of Ontario and a member of IEEE.

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