Bridging the Information Divide: Bridging the Information Divide Victor Bahl
Senior Researcher
Manager, Networking Group
Microsoft Research January 2005
3+ billion people…: 3+ billion people… Pay a “poverty premium” for basic goods and services
Have little access to important amenities
Make livelihood decisions with incomplete information
Technology alone is not the answer…: The Real Digital Divide
The Economist
Mar 10th 2005 Technology alone is not the answer… Deeper socio-economic issues have to be addressed However technology can help….
Remarks by Secretary General Kofi Annan (Opening ceremony of the World Electronic Media Forum) December 9, 2003: Remarks by Secretary General Kofi Annan (Opening ceremony of the World Electronic Media Forum) December 9, 2003
“The goal is an information society – open and inclusive – in which knowledge empowers all people, and serves the cause of improving human condition”
“All over the developing world, as antennas and satellite dishes sprout across the landscape - we can see the immense thirst for connection. Let us show that we are listening.”
Slide5: Thirst for Connection…
Thirst for Connection…: Thirst for Connection… Driven by
e-governance, telemedicine, e-learning, LRIS (Land record Information System)
Projects, Business India, Jan. 3, 2005
Project Akshaya in Kerala
Project Bhoomi in Karnataka
Project Sarita in Maharashtra
Project Bhu-Lekh in Haryana
Project Apna Khata in Rajastan
Project Tamil Nilan in Tamil Nadu
Project Rajiv Internet Village Project
(Planned) 6000 centers up to 22,000 panchayat In developing countries……
Slide7: Thirst for Connection…
Thirst for Connection…: Thirst for Connection… New Orleans launches free Wi-Fi service, Associated Press, November 30, 2005
“Biggest such effort by a major city yet”
San Francisco Keeps Pushing City Wide WiFi, CNET News.com, August 17, 2005
“San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom wants to make Wi-Fi coverage in the city as ubiquitous as the fog that blankets its neighborhoods.”
Wi-Fi Hits the Hinterlands, BusinessWeek Online, July 5, 2004
“Who needs DSL or cable? New “mesh” technology is turning entire small towns into broadband hot spots”
Rio Rancho N.M., population 60,000, 500 routers covering 103 miles2
NYC wireless network will be unprecedented, Computerworld, June 18, 2004
“New York City plans to build a public safety wireless network of unprecedented scale and scope, with a capacity to provide tens of thousands of mobile users”
Rural Areas need Internet too! Newsweek, June 7, 2004 Issue
“EZ Wireless built the country's largest regional wireless broadband network, a 600-square-mile Wi-Fi blanket, and activated it this February”
Hermiston, Oregon, population 13,200, 35 routers with 75 antennas covering 600 miles2
Mesh Casts Its Net, Unstrung, January 23, 2004
“Providing 57 miles2 of wireless coverage for public safety personnel in Garland Texas”
In United States……
Thirst for connection…: Thirst for connection… PCCW takes Wireless Broadband to London, The Register, September 2, 2005
“Prices for the service in UK start from £10 / month for 256 Kbps to £18 /month for 1 Mbps”
Anacapa and Firetide Bring Free Wireless Internet to La Semaine Italienne in Paris, France , Business Wire, 24 May, 2005
Bell Canada and Nortel Networks launch Project Chapleau, [designed to evaluate broadband in rural Canada], Optical Networks Daily, 18 July 2005
Nationwide Wi-Fi for Macedonia, Wi-Fi Planet, 18 Nov. 18, 2005
…
Around the world…
Slide10: Source: Leitchman Research Group “Residential broadband access is an under developed
technology that has the potential for profound positive
effect on people’s lives and Nation’s economy”
Residential Broadband Revisited, NSF Report, October 23, 2003
Services in Rural Areas(Determined by repeated visits to villages): Services in Rural Areas (Determined by repeated visits to villages) E-agriculture
E-government
Computer training
Telemedicine
VoIP, chat, e-mail
Etc. Kentaro Toyama :: Karishma Kiri
Services in Urban Areas(Determined from focus group studies): Services in Urban Areas (Determined from focus group studies) Inexpensive broadband Internet
Sharing info on goods, services, A/V,…
Gaming
Medical & emergency response
VoIP, chat, email
Security (e.g. neighborhood video surveillance) Internet use increased social contact, public participation and size of social network. (social capital - access to people, information and resources)
Prof. Keith N. Hampton, Sloan School, MIT (author of “Netville Neighborhood Study”)
URL: http://www.asanet.org/media/neville.html Alexander Popoff
You should care!: You should care! Because…
The future is about rich multimedia services & information exchange
…possible only with wide-scale availability of broadband Internet access
But…
Billions of people still do not have meaningful Internet service
Majority of the developing world does not have broadband connectivity
As much as 32 million homes in America do not take broadband service (rural areas, older neighbourhoods, poor neighbourhoods)
Design Constraints: Design Constraints Technology must be:
inexpensive, possibly free for end-users
easy to setup & deploy
require minimal ramp up time & easy to use
robust, handle failures (power-cuts, dust, heat, etc.)
self-managing – require minimal human intervention
Slide15: Connectivity Option I – Wire the Last Mile Scale & legacy make first mile expensive
~ 135 million housing units in the US (U.S. Census Bureau 2001)
POTS (legacy) network designed for voice & built over 60 years
Cable TV networks built over last 25 years
The Truck Roll Problem: Touching each home incurs cost: customer capital equipment; installation & servicing; central office equipment improvements; unfriendly terrain; political implications etc..
In our estimate building an alternate, physical last mile replacement to hit 80% of US homes will take 19 years and cost ~ US $60-120 billion Internet Backbone Middle Mile Last / First Mile Ian Ferrell
Slide16: Connectivity Option 2 – Wireless Last Mile < $2 Billion for 80% of the homes in US
Readily available & inexpensive
802.11 hardware or some version of it
Low deployment cost
Decentralized ownership & maintenance
Trivial setup & small hardware
Integrates easily indoors & outdoors
Flexible
Deployable In difficult terrain, both urban or remote
Connectivity option: Wireless Mesh: Connectivity option: Wireless Mesh Ad hoc multi-hop wireless network (with static topology)
Grows “organically”
Does not require any infrastructure
Provides high overall capacity
Robust & Fault tolerant
No centralized management, administration necessary
Empowers the individual
Slide18: Community Mesh Networks Organic – Participants own the equipment and the Network Venice Team
Architectural Options: Architectural Options SkyPilot, Flarion, Motorola (Canopy)
Invisible Networks, RoamAD, Vivato,
Arraycomm, Malibu Networks,
BeamReach Networks, NextNet
Wireless, Navini Networks, etc. Motorola (Meshnetworks Inc).,Radiant Networks,
Invisible Networks, FHP, Green Packet Inc.,
LocustWorld, etc. Infrastructure Based Infrastructure-less Architecture effects design decisions on
Capacity management, fairness, addressing & routing, mobility management, energy management, service levels, integration with the Internet, etc.
Deployment Scenarios: Deployment Scenarios March 2005, Source: Unstrung Insider
Related Work: Related Work The CITRIS TIER Project (UC Berkeley, USA)
Technology and Infrastructure for emerging regions
Richard Newton, Drew Issacs, Eric Brewer, Tom Kalil
http://tier.cs.berkeley.edu/
The Digital Gangetic Plains Project (IIT Kanpur, India)
802.11-based low-cost Networking for Rural India
Bhaskaran Raman, Dheeraj Sanghi, A.R. Harish, Mohan K. Mishra, Anish Bhatia, A.K. Singh, Ram Chandra Prajapati
http://www.iitk.ac.in/mladgp
The Roofnet Project (MIT, USA)
802.11 mesh network for broadband IA in cities
Dan Aguayo, John Bicket, Sanjit Biswas, Robert Morris
http://pdos.csail.mit.edu/roofnet/doku.php
The TAPs Project (Rice University, USA)
Wireless broadband to residential and public places
Edward Knightly, Behnaam Aazhang, J. Patrick Frantz, David Johnson, Ashu Sabarwal
http://taps.rice.edu/index.html
Some Relevant Standards: Some Relevant Standards IETF MANET
Layer 3 protocols for Mobile Ad Hoc Networks
IEEE 802.11s
Extended Service Set for Mesh Networking
IEEE 802.16
Broadband Wireless Metropolitan Area Networks
IEEE 802.20
Mobile Broadband Wireless Access for business & residential markets
IEEE 802.22
Wireless Regional Area Networks (WRANs)
OBAN
Broadband Coverage in Urban Area (European effort)
Wireless Meshes: Wireless Meshes
Many Challenges: Many Challenges Deployment
“Real-world” study with real traffic traces, usage patterns and failure /performance logs
Self Healing & Management
Minimal human intervention - avoid network operator
Mechanisms for data cleaning, anomaly detection & liar detection
Automatic tools for what-if analysis for optimal operation
Pleasant, hassle-free user experience (zero-configuration setup)
Smart Spectrum Utilization
Spectrum Policy - etiquettes and/or rules with technical input
Spectrum Leasing
Cognitive software & applications
Agile radios, cognitive radios, 60 GHz radio, underlay technologies
Slide25: Power
Battery capacity doubles in energy density every 35 years [Pow95]
Security, Privacy, and Fairness
Guarding against malicious users
Priority for VoIP and time-sensitive data
Connectivity, Range, Scale, and Capacity
Inexpensive electronically steerable directional antenna and/or MIMO
Multi-frequency meshes & multi-radio / multi-channel hardware
Data channel MAC with Interference management for higher throughput
Analytical Tools
Information theoretic tools that predict network viability & performance with practical constraints, based on experimental data Many Challenges (cont.)
Slide26: Research Community Assets Videos, Presentations, Notes etc.
http://research.microsoft.com/meshsummit/ Software, Papers, Presentations
http://research.microsoft.com/mesh/ http://research.microsoft.com/events/smnsummit/
Slide27: Academic Resource Kit 2005 meshkit@microsoft.com Prof. Sivaram Murthy, IIT, Chennai, India
Hybrid wireless mesh for rural communities
Prof. Sanjiva Prasad, IIT, New Delhi, India
Async. messaging in Wireless network
Prof. Lili Qiu, University of Texas Austin
Resilience in wireless mesh Networks
Prof. William Arbaugh, University of Maryland
Security and Privacy in wireless meshes
Prof. Suman Banerjee, University of Wisconsin
Quality of service in wireless meshes
Prof. Dan Rubenstein, Columbia University
Channelization and routing
Prof. Richard Newton, UC Berkeley
The TIER Project MS ERP has budgeted $1.2 million for research funding in FY06 under their Digital Inclusion Initiative http://research.microsoft.com/netres/kit/
Requests for Academic Resource Kit (as of 8/12): Requests for Academic Resource Kit (as of 8/12) Anna University, Chennai, India
Arizona State University,AZ
Auburn University, AL
Columbia University, NY
Dartmouth College , NH
DeVry University, Kansas City
Florida State University, FL
Gdansk University of Technology, Poland
Gwangju Institute of Sci&Tech, Korea
Hogschool Gent, Belgium
Huazhong University, China
Indian Institute of Science Bangalore, India
Institute of Compute Technology, China
Iowa State University Ames, IA
Iqra University, Pakistan
Katholieke Universiteit Leuven. Netherlands
National Chung Hsing University, Taiwan
National Institute of Technology Karnataka, India
National University of Singapore
New Mexico State University, NM
Ohio State University, OH
Rice University, TX
Rutgers University, NJ
Ryerson University Toronto, Canada
Saint-Hyacinthe College, Quebec, Canada
Sogang University, Korea
Stanford University, CA Syracuse University, NY
Technology University of Tswane, South Africa
Tsinghua University, Beijing, China
Univ. of Applied Sciences of Southern Switzerland
University of Victoria, Canada
University of Texas at San Antonio, TX
University of Louisiana at Lafayette
University of California Berkeley, CA
University of California San Diego, CA
University of California Irvine, CA
University of Cincinnati, OH
University of Concordia, Canada
Universidade Federal Fluminente, Brazil
Univ. Federal Fluminense Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
University of Hawaii, HI
University of Maryland, MD
University of Massachusetts Amherst, MA
University of New South Wales Sydney, Australia
University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, NC
University of South Florida, FL
University of Southern California, CA
University of Texas Austin, TX
University of Utah, UT
University of Waterloo, Canada
University of Wisconsin-Madison, WI
Virginia Tech, VA
Wyzsza Szkola Informatyki w Lodzi, Poland http://research.microsoft.com/netres/kit/
Broadband WiFi Debate: Broadband WiFi Debate Proponents
Local and state government should provide WiFi access free everywhere
Propel the country into yhr broadband age
Lower cost, faster deployment (specially in rural areas)
Stimulate competition by raising service standards
Detractors
Unfair to ask private sector to compete with local government who have tax dollars
Not a utility, highly competitive enterprise
Continuously changing due to innovation Two sides to the coin…. Phone Giants Are Lobbying Hard To Block Towns' Wireless Plans
Wall Street Journal, June 23, 2005
Slide30: Common consumer electronic device
Inexpensive; Value is clear;
First waves of practical devices that integrate cameras, processor, network, & display are in the market “The digital divide is really diminishing, and it's the mobile
phones doing it, not the PC”
Len Waverman, London Business School
The Mobile Phone: The Mobile Phone Gartner forecasts sales will approach 780 million units this year and more than 1 billion worldwide in 2009 China (as of May 2004)
25 million PCs
300 million cell phones India (as of May 2004)
15 million PCs
40 million cell phones
+ 2 million added / month Tracey Lovejoy Source: Strategy Analytics
http://www.strategyanalytics.net/ Source: Forrester Research,
December 10, 2004
What are people doing with mobile phones today?: What are people doing with mobile phones today? SMS Text-messaging Purchasing Web Surfing & email Watching & Sharing Video Taking & Sharing Pictures Expression of Identity Tracey Lovejoy
The SmartPhone Platform: The SmartPhone Platform Mobile and Embedded Devices
SmartPhone Ecosystem: SmartPhone Ecosystem Talk to people
Access information on the Internet
Monitor personal health & diagnose problems
Improve social interactions
Share experiences via AirBlogs Energy Harvesting MEMS Display WITTY HealthGear SPOT Barcode
Reader μPEN Xnav MSR Hardware Group WLAN, Cellular
What could people be doing with mobile phones tomorrow?: What could people be doing with mobile phones tomorrow? WiTTY Health Monitoring Social Grouping
WITTYWho Is Talking To You?: WITTY Who Is Talking To You? Array microphone + Bone vibration sensor = Speaker gating
Lower noise
Longer battery life Mike Sinclair :: Zhengyou Zhang Reduces effects of ambient noise
WITTY Microphone : WITTY Microphone Conventional microphone
High-quality audio
Sensitive to external noise or speech
Bone microphone
Very resistant to external noise or speech
Low-quality audio (less than 3KHz, distorted)
Fusion of complementary information:
Enhance user’s voice & eliminate noise + WITTY (Enhanced) 8 KHz sampling Jabra EarWrap Witty EarWrap Bone mic. Air mic. Mike Sinclair :: Zhengyou Zhang
Health Monitoring: Health Monitoring Aging population in developed countries
Rural areas in developing countries
SmartPhone technology will transforming health care
Early detection of health deterioration
Notifying health care providers in critical situations
Enhancing sense of connectedness with loved ones
Find correlations between lifestyle and health
Sports conditioning
Sleep Apnea: Sleep Apnea A common undiagnosed condition
Affects children and adults
4% in men and 2% in women (higher for elderly)
Untreated causes $3.4 billion of medical costs
40 million undiagnosed Americans
Periods of interrupted breathing (apnea) & reduced
breathing (hypoapnea)
Leads to
Hypoxia, asphyxia and awakenings
Increased heart-rate, high blood pressure
Extreme fatigue, poor concentration
Compromised immune system
Cardio/cerebrovascular problems Nuria Oliver :: Fernando-Flores Mangas :: Mike Sinclair
HealthGear: HealthGear Real-time, wearable health monitoring system
Mobile phone as central processing unit
Continuous recording of blood oximetry, heart-rate & plethysmographic signal
Real-time analysis and presentation of data to the user Nuria Oliver :: Fernando-Flores Mangas :: Mike Sinclair
HealthGear: HealthGear Real-time, wearable health monitoring system
Mobile phone as central processing unit (Audiovox SMT5600)
Continuous recording of blood oximetry, heart-rate & plethysmographic signal
Real-time analysis and presentation of physiological data to the user Nuria Oliver :: Fernando-Flores Mangas :: Mike Sinclair SmartPhone Bluetooth Storage Display Analysis SD Card
Up to 2.0 Gb Raw Data Diagnosis LCD Transmission Module Sensor Bluetooth DSP Analogical Data Serial Stream GPRS CLIENT SERVER Hardware Architecture
Slide42: Nuria Oliver :: Fernando-Flores Mangas :: Mike Sinclair No Apnea Mild-Severe Apnea Severe Apnea Test Results
Related Work: Related Work MDKeeper, Tadiran Spectralink
Launching in 2006
For cardiac and circulatory disease
Measures pulse rate, cardiac rhythm (ECG or EKG) and blood oxygen levels.
Can store or transmit using GPRS
:
:
:
Slide44: SLAM Scott Counts :: Shelly Farnham :: Jordan Schwartz Lightweight Grouping for Mobile Communication, Coordination, & Sharing Smartphone application for:
Real-time communication and media sharing
Continuous access to social circles
Social networking across events
Slide45: The Mobile Advantage
The social computer you take everywhere
Support natural social interactions
Hyperawareness
Hypercoordination
SLAM Scott Counts :: Shelly Farnham :: Jordan Schwartz Lightweight Grouping for Mobile Communication, Coordination, & Sharing
Slide46: SLAM Lightweight Grouping for Mobile Communication, Coordination, & Sharing Groups & Events
Easily make new groups on the fly
Minimal click event creation
Communication & Sharing
Group-wide distribution
Conversation + blog + profile
Photo-rich social presence
Bridging the Information Divide: Bridging the Information Divide Technology can help
Connectivity Options
Organically growing wireless meshes that require minimal human intervention
Services Platform
SmartPhone for deploying compelling services
but we have to work together……. The power of ideas and opportunities, fueled by local entrepreneurial energy, is the
most important resource available in this resource-scarce part of our world.
- Richard Newton, Dean UC Berkeley
Call To Action: Call To Action Together academia, government, and industry must develop common vision Perform scenario & systems based research tackling hard problems Partner in building and deploying real-world test beds
Slide49: Thanks! http://research.microsoft.com/~bahl
Backup Material: Backup Material
Automatic Detection of Sleep Apnea: Automatic Detection of Sleep Apnea Multithreshold Time Analysis:
Defines multiple levels of desaturation (drop gap) and resaturation (return gap)
Desaturation starts when oxygen level falls below a baseline by a certain amount
continues until the signal recovers to a level, which is lower than the baseline by 25% of the specified amount
Spectral Analysis:
Periodogram of the mean-subtracted oximetry signal
Sleep apnea events are detected as a peak in the range 0.015-0.04Hz
This frequency has a fisiological explanation corresponding to the typical lenghts of apnea events Nuria Oliver :: Fernando-Flores Mangas :: Mike Sinclair
Slide52: Groups & Events
Easily make new groups on the fly
Minimal click event creation
Communication & Sharing
Group-wide distribution
Conversation + blog + profile
Photo-rich social presence Slam Home Screen Group Screen Photo View Make New Group Send Message SLAM Lightweight Grouping for Mobile Communication, Coordination, & Sharing Scott Counts :: Shelly Farnham :: Jordan Schwartz