Wireless ad hoc networks
We build mobile ad hoc networks using forwarding nodes, explains Markus Augel from ESK. Its less complicated than it sounds. A notebook, mobile phone and a PDA, for example, automatically form a wireless network that organizes itself. The forwarding nodes the core of our technology simultaneously interconnect multiple devices and transfer data from one device to another. As the user moves around the house, his position in relation to the node changes. This can interrupt the connection. To overcome this, we developed a hand-over process for the Bluetooth standard. This technology automatically passes a deteriorating connection to a forwarding node that provides better quality. As is the case with mobile phones, the user is not aware of this happening. Moreover, the notebook and PDA are not directly connected, but instead communicate via the forwarding nodes using multi-hop communications. The greater the number of forwarding nodes, the wider the WLAN or Bluetooth transmission range. The nodes, small white boxes that require only battery or AC power, work with any Bluetooth or WLAN compatible device.
The ESK prototype provides wireless Internet access from anywhere in the home. Other potential uses include distributing information throughout shopping centers and museums or exchanging electronic business cards even using different devices. The only requirement is that the device makes itself known to the network. Downloading an MP3 song from your home-office computer to a PDA while you sit in the garden then becomes easy. Or with sensors and actuators and a mobile phone, close the blinds without having to get up out of your favorite chair.Contact:,Dipl.-Inform. Markus Augel,Phone +49 89 54 70 88-3 40,Fax +49 89 54 70 88-2 20,markus.augel@esk.fraunhofer.de,Fraunhofer-Einrichtung fur Systeme der Kommunikationstechnik,ESK,Hansastra?e 32,80686 Munchen,http://www.esk.fraunhofer.de