TDMA vs. CDMA
How the Feds
Blew It, Once Again
by Franco Vitaliano
(1996)
Overcrowding In The Cellular Tenement
It is no secret to
frazzled users that cellular systems are rapidly becoming overcrowded.
Fundamentally, the problem rests in the fact that cellular systems are fixed in
channel capacity, with a limited number of available frequencies. This caller
tenement overcrowding was foreseen by the industry. As far back as 1988, the
industry had called for a new approach that offered at least a ten fold increase
in cellular telephone call carrying capacity.
Even then, a digital
solution was seen as the answer to the impending analog cellular logjam. From
this call for industry salvation, two competing, incompatible, digital
technology standards emerged. Each specifies how the bandwidth spectrum is
allocated during your cellular call. One technique is called Time-Division
Multiple Access (TDMA). The other is known as Code-Division Multiple Access
(CDMA).
Both technologies share the common goal of allowing the maximum
number of calls to simultaneously take place. And both techniques are equally
applicable to the new PCS (Personal Communications Services) micro-cells, as
well as to other types of wireless networks. TDMA was seen as a quick start
technology because it already had an established market base in Europe; the
TDMA-based GSM (Global System for Mobile Communications) digital cellular
system. TDMA was thus selected in 1989 as a digital cellular standard.
TDMA multiplexes up to three conversations over the same 30-kilohertz
transmission channel. However, TDMA's caller menage a trois was far less than
the tenfold increase than was requested by the industry. Efforts are therefore
underway to up this simultaneous user number by as much a six or eightfold. But
TDMA offered access service vendors a quick way to get going, with some optimism
for more calling capacity to come.
Had matters stopped there with TDMA,
life would have been simpler, if not necessarily better. But as in all things
digital, a technology dark house suddenly emerged from a west coast company
called Qualcomm. This outfit had been in the business of supplying the military
with spread spectrum technologies for things like spy satellites.
Spread
spectrum, in a nutshell, allows multiple frequencies to be used simultaneously,
rather than just one narrow slice of it. So, while TDMA attempts to shoehorn
ever more calls into the same tight fitting frequency channel, CDMA provides a
way out of the box. CDMA was the first to meet the ten fold call carrying
capacity increase originally asked for by the industry. In fact, it can provide
up to a twenty fold increase. CDMA pulls off this clever trick by assigning each
call a unique code.
Every packet has an identifier, so the base station
can recognize whether it's voice or data, and process it accordingly. CDMA
further allows every customer (which can include a number of users), to utilize
the entire 1.25-MHz frequency allocation of the cell. This CDMA code permits a
call to be readily identifiable from all other calls swimming in the vast
frequency sea -- presuming both ends of the same conversation know and share the
unique code. The originating CDMA-encoded bit stream is thus locked into a
receiver which continually scans only for the unique code. All other call codes
are ignored.
This encoding scheme has a number of attractions. Call
security, for example, is much easier to achieve, as the CDMA encoding scheme
lends itself quite easily to crypto-techniques. Moreover, as your call is no
longer living in an overcrowded, one room TDMA apartment, CDMA's spread spectrum
caller high rise allows much more conversation carrying capacity. CDMA
proponents also claim much better range, which means fewer calling cells to
handle calls, and much lower power requirements.
With respect to PCS;
like cellular systems, it now has two primary competing standards. One is
CDMA-based, and the other is the TDMA-based, GSM European-derived standard. It
used to be that the primary drawback to CDMA was that only one equipment
supplier, Motorola, backed the technology. But all that has changed. AT&T,
Goldstar, Hyundai, Northern Telecom, Samsung, Sony, OKI, and others, are now
building PCS gear that supports CDMA.
It is interesting to note the
large number of Asian manufacturers getting behind CDMA. The reason is quite
simple. The Europeans managed to keep the big volume Far East manufactures out
of the GSM/TDMA business, thus giving their home teams a virtual lock on the
equipment industry. But CDMA-based PCS is a whole new ball game where everyone
can play, and in the biggest single market to boot -- the U.S. Thus, Qualcomm
not only offered superior technology, it also provided the off shore consumer
manufacturing giants an entree into an explosive new market. All in all, a
winning hand, and Qualcomm has played it very well.
This doesn't mean
that TDMA is going away any time soon. Already, 'Composite' CDMA/TDMA technology
is appearing. This hybrid technology won a Pioneer's Preference PCS license in
the lucrative New York City market. This shotgun marriage notwithstanding, TDMA
still has a real market share fight on its hands.
How the Feds
Blew it
But
much more importantly than this looming market battle, the spread spectrum
technology used by CDMA calls into question the whole rationale of the Federal
Communications Commission (FCC), and its highly publicized public auctions for
thin slices of PCS bandwidth in the 1.9 GHz frequency range. This area of
bandwidth was carved up by the FCC into six frequency blocks (tagged A through
F) between 10 and 30 megahertz. In addition a separate 20MHz band, 1910-1930
MHz, was also allocated by the FCC for low power, unlicensed PCS; the so called
U-PCS (tantamount to a PCS 'citizen band' radio).
At the FCC PCS license
auctions, up for grabs were 51 MTAs, Major Trading Areas, and 492 BTA's, or
Basic Trading Areas. (The MTA's and BTA's were based by the FCC on the1992 Rand
McNally Commercial Atlas & Marketing Guide, 123rd Edition, pp. 38-39). The
FCC intends to issue two PCS licenses for each MTA, and four for each BTA, for a
total of 2,070 licenses. The FCC thus went out of its way to ensure that there
would be several competing PCS service providers within each geographical
market. Free market forces would therefore help the consumer get the best PCS
deal, or so it was reasoned.
Unfortunately, the FCC may have sold off the
wrong thing, at the wrong time. Instead of encouraging maximum and best free
market use of PCS bandwidth, the FCC may have actually hindered the growth of
the entire mobile wireless industry, to the consumer's detriment. If vast hunks
of bandwidth can be used by one CDMA call (bandwidth on demand), then what's the
point, or market value, of the FCC selling off narrow, 'beachfront' PCS bands?
Shoehorning ever more calls into one constrictive frequency no longer makes
economic or technical sense. CDMA's bandwidth on demand means that video and
other high data volume systems can be equally happy roaming the 'open' ether,
along with voice calls.
Most significant to contemplate, is what would
happen if Steinbrecher Corp.'s radio (a system that can scan any range of
frequency spectrum, and in real time, instantly detect which channels are free)
were to be combined with CDMA. If this dynamic technology duo were to be
deployed in parallel, they would completely destroy any pretense that narrow
slices of frequency bandwidth were precious PCS commodities, to be auctioned off
to the highest bidder.
With CDMA and the Steinbrecher radio, all
available bandwidth, right up and down the frequency spectrum, could be
dynamically allocated for your changing communications needs. PCS now seems to
be a classic case of the government getting into a technology business it just
did not understand, with the ultimate loser being the consumer -- the one whom
the government was supposedly looking after in the first place.
So,
score one for free market forces, even if the run didn't count.
Copyright 1996,
Franco Vitaliano, All Rights Reserved
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