Irish team leads global wireless research initiative
Posted on: 18 April 2007
The world’s first trials of advanced new wireless communication technologies have started in
Dublin
. The globally unique trials are being conducted by an international team of industry leaders and top researchers led by
Ireland
‘s Centre for Telecommunications Value Chain Research (CTVR) based in Trinity College Dublin.
Ireland‘s Commission for Communications Regulation ComReg has granted the CTVR and a number of top global firms a special trial license for the research which aims to identify how increasingly scarce space in the world’s radio wavebands can best be used in the interests of society and the economy.
The research will have worldwide significance and findings will be eagerly awaited by international industry and research interests. They involve technology placed at fixed locations and the use of a multi-million euro mobile test centre which will travel around the Greater Dublin Area throughout April.
Key
US
,
UK
and European companies including Motorola Research Labs, the Shared Spectrum Company and QiniteQ, in addition to government contractors and the top worldwide academic research groups working on these innovative technologies will be participating in the trials.
The move coincides with a gathering of 1,000 of the world’s leading telecommunications industry experts in
Dublin
in the next two weeks for major conferences to explore the future of wireless communications. Raw data from the trials will be fed directly into the conferences by CTVR.
“ComReg has an innovative wireless test and trial scheme, making
Ireland
one of the very few places in the world where activity of this kind can take place,” says Prof. Donal O’Mahony, Director of CTVR which is staging the trials. “The trials will showcase cognitive or smart radio, innovative networks and emerging frequency technologies with a unique opportunity for companies worldwide to trial innovative wireless communications technologies.”
Prof. O’Mahony continued: “
Ireland
is an ideal base for experimental trials of the latest concepts and developments in wireless communications before deployment in target areas worldwide. The local research capacity, combined with ComReg’s enlightened licensing policy, position
Ireland
to be the wireless research community’s Spectrum Playground.”
Trinity College Dublin is one of a consortium of eight research institutions forming the CTVR which is supported by Science Foundation
Ireland
and IDA Ireland.