The invention discloses an improved method of operating a wireless telecommunications device, and in particular, to a method of operating a dual SIM wireless communications device
The term ‘wireless telecommunications device’ includes any digital or other device capable of wireless communications, which includes without limitation, Mobile Telephones and Smartphones together with any computing devices with such capabilities. These may include Desktop and Laptop computers, Personal Digital Assistants (PDAs), Digital Cameras and Digital Music together with converged devices incorporating the functionality of one or more of the classes of such devices, together with many other industrial and domestic electronic appliances.
For simplicity, the description of this invention primarily references mobile telephone handsets; however, such references should be expansively construed to refer to any wireless telecommunications devices with comparable functionality.
Since the first commercial services began in 1991, GSM (Groupe Spécial Mobile or Global System for Mobile communications) has become the most widely used technology for mobile wireless telecommunications, with about 75% of the worldwide market, and over 1.5 billion subscribers on over 100 different GSM compatible networks. The system has evolved through GPRS (General Packet Radio Services) and EDGE (Enhanced Data rates for GSM Evolution) to 3GSM (Third Generation GSM) networks.
All GSM devices incorporate a SIM (Subscriber Identity Module) card which holds all the information needed for the GSM Network Provider to establish the identity of the person using the phone, allocate the appropriate telephone number, and bill the costs of any calls to the appropriate account holder. When the SIM card is moved from one GSM handset to another GSM handset, the identity of the subscriber moves with it. Similarly, the removal of the SIM card from a GSM handset and its replacement with another SIM card results in the GSM handset identifying itself to the network as a different subscriber and being allocated a different telephone number.
It is becoming increasingly common for individuals to have more than one GSM subscription. There may be a number of reasons for this:
Although increasing numbers of people possess multiple SIMs, it remains the case that GSM mobile phones are designed and sold for use with only one SIM card. This forces users with dual SIMs to adopt one of two solutions:
The problems caused by the inability of GSM handsets to support more than a single SIM at any one time is well-known, and there have been a number of attempts to overcome the problem.
Examples of prior art which adapts handsets to make use of two SIM cards include the disclosures of EP 0586081 from Nokia Mobile Phones and AU 1953299 from Newcom Technologies PTY Ltd, both of which describe a digital mobile telephone capable of holding multiple SIMS, only one of which can be active at any one time. Such devices have been commercially manufactured; the Benefon Twin+ handset is an example of a prior device in this area. This GSM telephone had two SIM sockets, but could only support one SIM at a time. The phone had to be switched off and then switched on again in order to change SIM. The user manual for this device can be obtained from http://benefon.com/products/twin/.
Other examples of similar art include dual or even triple SIM adapters such as those marketed under the ‘Ghost’ brand by various resellers, and those sold by companies such as Magicsim (http://www.magicsim.com/). All these adapters are similar to the Benefon Twin+ in that they require the telephone to be switched off and on again when SIMs are changed. For some of these devices, the SIMs alternate on each power cycle. Others have a mechanical switch that can be used to select the desired subscriber identity. The Magicsim devices use SIM Tookit commands to enable the user to select the desired SIM from an on-screen menu.
See http://www.m-99.co.uk/Mobile_Phone_Twin_SIM_adapters/GVC_Ghost_Dual_and_Triple_SIM_/gvc_ghost_dual_and_triple_sim_.html for a summary of these devices. While these devices do solve the mechanical problem outlined above, in that the user no longer has to juggle both SIMs, the telephone, the battery and the battery cover at the same time, they have a key deficiency in that they do not permit a subscriber to have both SIMs active at the same time.
While one SIM is selected, it disables the alternate SIM and cannot make use of it; when calls are made to its telephone number, it appears to the network as if the phone is turned off. A user would therefore miss both incoming calls and any text messages or other forms of data communication directed at the inactive SIM card. These would therefore be either diverted or stored; picking up these messages generally costs the user time and/or money, and can result in delays in receiving messages.
The only method disclosed to date for supporting simultaneous multiple SIMs in a GSM telephone is equivalent to building two separate phones in the same case with the same power supply, akin to Siamese twins. Such a telephone has been disclosed in patent WO99/41921 from Telital SPA. It duplicates all the hardware and software required to enable a wireless GSM connection for each SIM (i.e. a second processor, power amplifier and controller, transceiver, frequency synthesizer, base band unit, DSP, SIM holder and electronics). This allows users to switch between the two SIMs for making calls and have both SIMs active simultaneously for receiving calls and messages.
However, the constraints of mobile telephone manufacturing costs and battery life mean this is not a commercially feasible solution; no handsets implemented the Telital patent are known to have ever been available.
The present invention enables a single GSM mobile telephone to support two SIMs simultaneously using only a single GSM radio.
According to a first aspect of the present invention there is provided a method of operating a wireless telecommunications device containing multiple subscriber identities which have been allocated by one or a plurality of wireless networks by which the said multiple subscriber identities are enabled and activated for simultaneous use on a single wireless network.
According to a second aspect of the present invention there is provided a computing device arranged to operate in accordance with a method of the first aspect.
According to a third aspect of the present invention there is provided an operating system for causing a computing device to operate in accordance with the first aspect.
Embodiments of the present invention will now be described, by way of further example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
The present invention enables a single GSM mobile telephone to support two SIMs simultaneously using only a single GSM radio.
In order to understand the preferred implementation of this invention, it is necessary to be familiar with some of the interactions between the SIM and the GSM cellular telephone network. These will now be described.
The major elements of the GSM telephone network are:
This simplified architecture is shown in
A single GSM network is often referred to as a Private Land Mobile Network (PLMN).
A GSM SIM contains two unique numbers, which are allocated by the network operator. The first of these is known as the International Mobile Subscriber Identifier (IMSI), and is used to identify the SIM to any GSM network to which the mobile equipment containing the SIM wishes to connect. The SIM includes codes for the country and PLMN as well as the individual subscriber. The second unique number stored in the SIM is known as the Ki. This is kept private even from the subscriber; it cannot be read from the SIM, and is never transmitted over the air. Both the IMSI and the Ki are each unique to the SIM in which they are stored. The PLMN which issued the SIM keeps copies of each IMSI and Ki which it has issued, normally in the HLR.
GSM signalling provides a method of communicating between a BSS and a number of MSs by dividing up the physical communication channels in use into a number of logical channels, which are defined by recurring patterns of timeslots and frequencies. One physical channel can support many logical channels.
Some of these logical channels are termed common control channels (CCCHs), and are typically shared by every MS in a particular cell for communicating when any particular MS is in idle mode (not engaged in a call).
Other logical channels are used for the transfer of data to and from one particular MS when it is in dedicated mode. These include a number of dedicated control channels, such as the bidirectional Stand-Alone Dedicated Control Channel (SDDCH) used for authentication, together with the main traffic channels used for transfer of data such as voice.
A full account of this procedure can be found in ETSI 04.08. However, a simplified account of one typical case of a single SIM telephone registering with a new cell in a GSM network will now be described with reference to
A key perception behind this invention is that the GSM protocols and authentication procedures make use of distinct logical control channels but do not necessarily require the use of separate physical control channels. Therefore, a device equipped with only a single GSM radio need not be restricted from registering and supporting multiple SIMs provided that those multiple SIMs can use the same common control channel. This is in fact the case where multiple SIMs can all be registered with the same BTS (so all the SIMs are in the same cell on the same network). The main limitation in respect of using multiple logical control channels is in fact a limitation of the ME; the handset needs to allow sufficient memory in its protocol stack for tracking multiple instantiations of the logical control channels. There is no need for multiple instances of any radio hardware, since the logical control channels for all the SIMs are carried on the same physical channel.
In fact, many GSM handsets currently available do allocate resources for multiple cases of the various common and dedicated control channels. These are used for such common GSM features such as call handoffs from cell to cell, supporting call holding, accepting second incoming calls, making conference calls and receiving SMS while in during the active mode. The BSS and the MS switch the communications context between the various control channels on demand to support relevant channels and sub-channels as required.
Some MEs already reserve resources for up to 6 logical control channels on power-up, in order to anticipate the worse case call scenario. In order to fully support multiple SIMs, more resources may need to be reserved, as the number of possible instantiations of logical control channels would be larger. Smartphones with access to unallocated resources in the form of heap memory may be able to allocate additional instantiations on the fly as needed.
As described above, multiple instantiations of the control channels can be used to allow a single handset with a single GSM radio to support the registration of multiple SIMs provided that all those SIMs are registered with the same BSS. Clearly, there is no problem with this if both SIMs have been issued by the same network provider. However, even where the SIMs have been issued by different network providers, registration with the same BSS is still possible by making use of the fact that roaming SIM cards can normally access any BSS belonging to any network within receiving range; so, for example, if able to roam in the UK, a SIM can access at least the PLMNs operated by Vodafone, O2, Orange and T-Mobile.
By means of this invention, therefore, multiple active SIM cards can be supported with the following permutations of SIM cards and PLMNs:
For the purposes of clarification it must be noted that the invention does not support permutations of SIM cards and PLMNs where the SIM cards are issued by different network providers, and where there is no locally available PLMN on which they can both roam; because in such cases, it would not be possible to register all SIMs on the same BSS. It follows, therefore, that a UK Vodafone SIM card and a UK Orange SIM card, even if both enabled for international roaming, cannot be used together in the UK, since no UK networks permit national roaming across UK PLMNs. However, the same combination of cards can be taken across the Channel, for example, and used with this invention on a PLMN operated by a non-UK network provider such as Orange France, SFR or Bouygues.
In a preferred implementation of this invention, an ME that is first switched on scans the available GSM networks to identify which one to select as the PLMN. Should one of the SIMs in the system be able to identify its home network, that PLMN should be given priority. This selection of the home network has the benefit of avoiding roaming charges for at least one SIM and should also offer a reasonable possibility that the second or further (roaming) SIMs can also successfully register on the same PLMN. If there is no home network available, but there is a PLMN that both SIMs can use, then the strongest of that type is chosen instead.
Once a PLMN has been selected, the registration of multiple SIMs requires a relatively straightforward software modification in the ME, which simply consists of iterating steps 2 to 10 of the GSM subscriber registration and authentication procedure outlined above for each SIM in the handset. This modified procedure, together with the selection of the PLMN, is shown diagrammatically in
Once the multiple registrations have been successfully completed the ME must now wake up periodically to monitor its paging channel(s). As described earlier, the paging channels in GSM are logical channels that are normally assigned by the BTS according to the last three digits of the IMSI. This is to group multiple subscribers onto a single paging channel for load balancing and battery/power management. This means that a device implementing this invention may, if its SIMs are allocated different paging channels, need to wake up more often, because the device must listen to each of the paging channels that are assigned to each of the authenticated SIM cards.
In this way the ME can receive a Mobile terminated call from any of its SIM cards that have been authenticated with the PLMN.
It can also make mobile originated calls from any of its authenticated SIM cards by requesting a dedicated channel via the RACH.
The implementation of this invention also requires
Note that some of these tasks can be simplified by making use of the memory storage available in each SIM; for example, SMS messages could be stored in the memory of the SIM to which they were addressed.
The software in the ME would also have to correctly handle call collisions, where incoming calls to one SIM occur during an incoming call to another SIM.
It is not possible to take both calls simultaneously; while this invention permits an ME to instantiate multiple logical control channels (which all share the same physical channel) it does not permit multiple dedicated traffic channels on a single device. Only one SIM can be in active traffic mode at any one time. Note however that call collisions between incoming calls on different SIMs are in principle no different to call collisions on a single SIM, and can be handled in the same way.
In an enhancement to this invention, an ME supporting multiple SIMs would also support a separate International Mobile Equipment Identifier (IMEI) for each SIM or SIM socket.
The IMEI is a unique number allocated to an ME at manufacture time, which also contains indications of manufacturer and modes. According to GSM 02.16
“A network operator can make administrative use of the IMEI in the following manner:
Three registers are defined, known as “white lists”, “grey lists” and “black lists”. The use of such lists is at the operators' discretion.
It shall be possible to perform the IMEI check at any access attempt, except IMSI detach, and during an established call at any time when a dedicated radio resource is available, in accordance with the security policy of the PLMN operator. The network shall terminate any access attempt or ongoing call when receiving any of the answers “black-listed” (i.e., on the black list) or “unknown” equipment (i.e., not on the white list) from the EIR.”
It should be noted that while the allocation of an IMEI to an ME is compulsory, its interrogation by the network is optional, and IMEIs are not registered and tracked in the same way that IMSIs are. While a network could in theory check IMEIs for simultaneous usage, this is not envisaged in the GSM standards. However, allocations of a separate IMEI to each SIM or SIM socket on an ME would serve to prevent any problems which may be caused by the same IMEI being involved in two separate IMSI registrations.
This invention allows multiple GSM SIMs to function in a single handset, without needing to disable all but one of the SIMs and thereby missing out on incoming calls and message notifications. This is of great utility to mobile telephone users seeking to minimise roaming charges, and also to those users who need to maintain access to two subscriber accounts at all times.
Although the present invention has been described with reference to particular embodiments, it will be appreciated that modifications may be effected whilst remaining within the scope of the present invention as defined by the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0612634.6 | Jun 2006 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/GB07/02368 | 6/26/2007 | WO | 00 | 7/23/2010 |