P800/P802

White Paper, January 2003

Here is a summary of the slot usages in HSCSD. One ‘uplink’ and 1 to 2 ‘downlinks’.

Analogue and ISDN (V110) Bearer Service Types

CSD and HSCSD are capable of Analogue and, where supported by the mobile operator, ISDN connections. ISDN offers faster call set-up time and can increase the performance of an HSCSD connection due to the limitations in analogue modem technology. The simplest option is to test ISDN bearer mode, and switch to analogue if no connection can be made. Note that due to network limitations, analogue is often the only bearer that works when the user is roaming.

GPRS

GPRS mode combines the speed advantages of multi-timeslot working with packet data efficiency. Instead of utilizing a constant stream of timeslots in a circuit-switched call, GPRS mode sends/receives data in small packets, as needed, much like IP on the internet. Capacity is only used when data is being sent or received, which means that it is possible to be “constantly” connected so that applications have immediate access to networked servers. The radio resources are shared between users in a much more efficient way than is possible using circuit-switched methods – timeslots are dynamically allocated to those users who are transmitting and receiving data. The service is typically charged by the amount of data transferred.

Server

Connection set-up is fast and the P800 will normally be left connected for the whole time it is switched on. When applications need to transfer large amounts of data such as files, images etc, it is possible to increase bandwidth by using more timeslots for the duration of the transfer. The P800 supports up to 4+1 timeslots receive + transmit. The GSM network will dynamically allocate timeslot resources depending on current network conditions.

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