CS 9352 MOBILE AND PERVASIVE COMPUTING REGULATIONS 2008 syllabus and question papers
ANNA UNIVERSITY :: CHENNAI 600 025
REGULATIONS – 2008
CURRICULUM FOR B.E. COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING
AIM:
To introduce the students to the current challenges and insight regarding the way how mobile computing is evolving towards the world of pervasive computing.
OBJECTIVES:
- Understand and identify requirements issue limitation parameters and components in computing
- Using such a knowledge, understand the rationale for the solution adopted in existing or emerging systems
- Able to participate in the development and proposal of future systems.
UNIT I MOBILE NETWORKS 9
Media Access Control – SDMA, FDMA, TDMA, CDMA – GSM – Architecture, Protocols, Connection Establishment, Frequency Allocation , Localization, Handover, Security –
GPRS.
UNIT II WIRELESS NETWORKS 9
Wireless LANs and PANs – IEEE 802.11 Standard – Architecture – Services –Network – HiperLAN – Blue Tooth- Wi-Fi – WiMAX
UNIT III ROUTING 9
Mobile IP – DHCP – AdHoc– Proactive and Reactive Routing Protocols – Multicast Routing.
UNIT IV TRANSPORT AND APPLICATION LAYERS 9
Mobile TCP– WAP – Architecture – WWW Programming Model– WDP – WTLS – WTP –
WSP – WAE – WTA Architecture – WML – WMLScripts.
UNIT V PERVASIVE COMPUTING 9
Pervasive computing infrastructure-applications- Device Technology - Hardware, Human-machine Interfaces, Biometrics, and Operating systems– Device Connectivity – Protocols, Security, and Device Management- Pervasive Web Application architecture- Access from PCs and PDAs - Access via WAP
TOTAL: 45 PERIODS
TEXT BOOKS:
1. Jochen Schiller, “Mobile Communications”, PHI, Second Edition, 2003. 2. Jochen Burkhardt, “Pervasive Computing: Technology and Architecture of Mobile Internet Applications”, Addison-Wesley Professional; 3rd edition, 2007
REFERENCES:
1. Frank Adelstein, Sandeep KS Gupta, Golden Richard, “Fundamentals of Mobile and Pervasive Computing”, McGraw-Hill 2005
2. Debashis Saha, “Networking Infrastructure for Pervasive Computing: Enabling Technologies”, Kluwer Academic Publisher, Springer; First edition, 2002
3. “Introduction to Wireless and Mobile Systems” by Agrawal and Zeng, Brooks/ Cole (Thomson Learning), First edition, 2002
4. Uwe Hansmann, Lothar Merk, Martin S. Nicklons and Thomas Stober,“Principles of Mobile Computing”, Springer, New York, 2003
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