The present application relates to the field of multimedia reproduction, transmission and delivery systems including, among others, broadcast systems like analogue television and digital television, transmitted by traditional radio frequency broadcast, satellite signal, and cable television as well as systems in which the multimedia data are transmitted over the internet or similar.
Dongles: It is known to interface a television receiver, for example a DVB-T receiver with a computer by an USB link. Such devices, known as “Dongles”, are plugged into an USB port on a computer, laptop, mobile phone or any other computer-like device to watch TV. Here only programs can be watched which are transmitted by means of a terrestrial broadcasting system like, for example, DVB-T. There are many dongle-based products on the market from PCTV Systems, Elgato and others.
Cable connection: It is known in the art to use a device (e.g. TV, Set-Top-Box, Computer with suitable network card) connected to a cable network that carries Internet traffic or dedicated TV signals allows the user to watch TV programs. The programs may be transmitted encrypted to the home and then the user requires an appropriate decryption module, which is put into the signal path just before the video signal is shown on the screen.
Satellite: The structure described above for cable TV has been also applied to satellite television, or terrestrial digital television. A suitable device (e.g. TV, Set-Top-Box, Computer with suitable network card) is connected to a receiver that outputs TV signals allowing the user to watch TV programmes. The programs may be transmitted encrypted and decrypted as aforementioned.
There are also known systems that transmit multimedia data over a Wi-Fi network: one product on the market, for example receiving terrestrial TV signals and retransmitting them via a Wi-Fi access point to a user's laptop/computer/phone or TV, or rather using Wi-Fi to transmit a screen output of a computer to a large TV screen for viewing laptop content on a large TV screen, for example.
It is also known to control a television and a digital video recorder from anywhere using a wireless terminal on the internet, for example a mobile phone. It is also known to transport the multimedia signal from the DVR to a mobile phone using the Internet.
In wireless telecommunications, it is known to use a femtocell, consisting of a small cellular base station designed for use in a home or small business. It connects to the service provider's network via broadband (such as DSL or cable).
U.S. Pat. No. 6,970,127 and U.S. Pat. No. 7,599,691 are also related to the present invention.
The aforementioned technologies do describe how TV can be shared on different devices or how it can be transmitted from one device to another device. But they do not address and reduce the amount of data being transmitted in the backhaul and backbone of a network that carries the Internet traffic. Today it is well known that mobile devices, in particular the iPhone and other smart portable Internet terminals, have increased the amount of data traffic in the 3G wireless macro-cell network, also on the backhaul and backbone, to such an extent that operators, e.g. some operators have changed the cost structure from flat-rate to staggered-rates, in order to “punish” high capacity generating users. In some cases they have limited the bandwidth or the data volume to customers that use a femtocell/access point.
With reference to
In the situation represented by
A typical access point 30, as represented in
An access point can carry the data over the air, the air-interface, using different procedures and methodologies, which are defined in standards. Common standards are 802.11 (Wi-Fi), 802.15, 802.16 (WiMax), 3G/WCDMA/HSPA, LTE.
A femtocell protocol stack can have the architecture depicted in
In conventional systems, when many users watch (live) TV then the whole data traffic will come from the Internet via the GGSN, RNC and AP before it goes through the air-interface to the mobile device, as shown in
The proposed invention describes a system that increases the value of, for example, femtocells or any other wireless access point system, to the network operator because it reduces the data traffic in the macro-cell network stemming from mobile phones/devices, as defined by the appended claims.
The invention proposes means to reduce the data volume, data congestion and latency, and hence reduces operator expenditures and improves user experience. As represented in
A multiplexer unit (MUX) 68 is added to combine the data streams from the various receivers. In the represented schematic, the MUX unit is represented as part of the DPU 60. It could be, for example a software module arranged to combine TV signals or other multimedia data originating from either the DVB receiver 70 or the Ethernet interface 40 and routing it to the mobile devices 85, 83 connected to the access point 30 through the transceiver 50, or to the television set 95 via the Ethernet interface 40 and the set-top box 90. Alternatively, the MUX 68 could be a bespoke piece of hardware connected to the DPU 60.
Preferably the MUX 68 unit or the data processing unit contains an Electronic Program Guide (EPG) 67 entity that processes the EPG information. The EPG contains the program information and allows the user to see what programs can be watched. Preferably the EPG entity then creates or re-assembles a collated EPG from the various EPGs that can be extracted from the DVB signal obtained by the receiver 70 or from a dedicated server in the Internet or made available by service providers. Thanks to this feature, the collated EPG provides all the information that is usually offered by IP-based EPG, and includes real-time updates, inserted by the TV senders in the DVB signal.
The data processing unit contains also a mechanism allowing the network operator to charge the user watching data over the air. The 3G spectrum, for example, is not free and therefore the operator has an interest to charge for spectrum usage. The charging function is part of the core network and is implement in a module called the Policy and Charging Rules Function (PCRF) that is connected to and located close to the Mobile switching Centre (MSC) or Gateway GPRS Support NODE (GGSN).
The access point of the invention preferably includes a charging control unit 65 that is arranged to communicate with the PCRF and report the use of multimedia data from the DVB receiver 70. Since the TV data does not go through either unit, the charging control built into the AP is responsible for informing the existing charging entity PCFR that the AP is transmitting data but from a different source than the PSTN or the Internet.
The access point of the present invention is therefore capable of serving multimedia data, for example TV programs to a plurality of devices, mobiles 83, 85 or fixed 90, 91 and of receiving the multimedia data either form the internet, by the Ethernet interface 40, for example in the form of an IPTV stream, or from a broadcast radio signal, by the antennas 71a, 71b and the DVB receiver 70.
When a user selects a certain program, that is available from both the IPTV channel and from the DVB channel, the data received by the DVB receiver are preferably inserted in the protocol stack by the DPU 60 in lieu of those of the IPTV, thus limiting the use of Internet resources. The switch of data source is preferably done in a seamless and transparent way for the user. According to a variant of the invention, the switch is by a command issued on behalf of the provider of the program, for example by the GGSN or by another server in the infrastructure of the ISP. In another variant, the switch is autonomously generated by the access point 30. In another variant, the switch is determined by choice of the user, via interaction with a suitable API element on the mobile device 83, 85 or TV set 91.
Currently most TV data is transmitted as MPEG2 streams while future systems may use the MPEG4/H.264/WebM that requires less bandwidth, for example from about 3.5 Mbps to below 1 Mbps for a standard-definition TV transmission. Both formats are compatible and part of the scope of the present invention.
Preferably the access point of the present invention includes a Transcoder arranged to convert the MPEG2 stream into MPEG4/H.264/WebM stream, reducing the data rate over the air-interface further and eases the processing load on the processor in the mobile device. Advantageously, this solution allows the use of cheaper mobile devices and preserves battery life. In addition, the interference caused by the in-house cell is reduced because the indoor cell can operate at lower power. Hence one can get additional system (capacity) gain in the adjacent macro-cells and indoor cells. The modified AP, means for example a 3G/LTE femtocell, looks as follows.
The protocol stack is modified to allow for the TV data to enter the data flow from a different source than the Ethernet physical layer. Further, the functions that control the establishment and management of a transport and physical channel on the air-interface and in the Radio Network Controller RNC are modified such that the Data Processing Unit DPU informs the RNC that the user wants to watch TV. The RNC in turn tells the AP what kind of transport and physical channel to create, i.e. data rate, quality level, power and physical channel parameters. The control function executed by the RNC can be moved into the AP also, and the AP provides the RNC only with the information necessary such as for billing or network management. The RNC is aware that the data is not coming from the Gateway GPRS Support Node GGSN but from within the AP, for example from the DVB-T interface. The DPU in the AP reconfigures itself and allows the data coming from the MUX to be processed in the protocol stack and being forwarded to the RF module for over-the-air transmission. If multiple users want to watch the same TV program, then the DPU will send the same data to the other users also, maybe using a broadcasting protocol like Multimedia Broadcasting Multicast System (MBMS), and the charging unit will ensure that each user is charged correctly.
The goal of this system is to reduce the data volume and the interference which reduces expenses at the operator side (for backhaul and backbone upgrades) and increases capacity in the wireless macrocell system because of reduced interference. The user will experience faster responses because the latency is significantly reduced due to the fact that all entities are located in the AP.
The present application is a continuation of International Patent Application PCT/EP2011/061080, which claims priority of US provisional patent application 61/360,533 of Jul. 1, 2010. The contents of these applications are hereby incorporated in their entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61360533 | Jul 2010 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/EP2011/061080 | Jun 2011 | US |
Child | 13692400 | US |