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| Homepage / Publications & Opinion / Silicon.com Dumb networks are about to get smarter Clever devices will be at the heart of fully intelligent networks... Written in my garden on the first warm day of summer and dispatched to silicon.com via an extended-range wi-fi link As peripherals have become smarter, our networks have looked progressively dumber. In some cases, could peripherals ultimately become the core of the network? Mesh networks have been around for many years in both fixed and mobile formats, with static and dynamic path allocation, partial trunking, and full node hopping. They have been used in civil and military arenas with hybrid fixed-mobile versions flying under the mobile ad-hoc network, or Manet, banner. In many publications, schematics show planar 2D MeshNets of static and evenly spaced nodes, but the reality is that 3D and uneven spacing is the norm with nodes of different types and configurations. To make things even more complex, many of the nodes can be on the move. This factor increases the operational ad hoc connectivity, with node switching and sporadic link loss likely. ![]() Image credit: Peter Cochrane/silicon.com Multilayer mobile MeshNet In the extreme, a message can be transmitted to all adjacent nodes and then propagated like some virus in a biological system. In other words, it can progress in every direction away from the source node and thereby flood the entire network, like pictured below. ![]() Image credit: Peter Cochrane/silicon.com Uncontrolled message propagation - viral mechanism These connection options allow multi-mode networking with long, short and close proximity hops. But there is now an added component - GPS. We actually know where devices are and whether they are moving and in which general direction. This approach adds another degree of freedom in the decision-making process, especially for all data-transmission modes. It also changes the nature of network flooding and for a mass migration of people and mobile devices it might be best visualised as a sneeze in the wind. ![]() Image credit: Peter Cochrane/silicon.com Only static and mobile nodes in the general direction of the target accept the message being transmitted Interestingly, this type of network requires very little, if any, global control or management today. Tomorrow, they may well require even less and may represent the manifestation of a fully intelligent network. The inclusion of a variety of sensors in mobile devices will make this development even more likely as we shall then have location, direction, activity, condition, history, habitual and future information. We shall also have a communication and association history for each device with an obvious option to share all this in a new social-networking mode of devices. And then, of course, there is the interaction with and influence on the fixed infrastructure. |
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