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Hewlett-Packard, Canadian university share IT research notes

Software-defined networking is โ€” by its name โ€” about using software on commodity hardware to control network functions.

But a Hewlett-Packard Co. official told a networking conference in Toronto on Friday that intelligence will still reside on switches and routers.

โ€œAt some point if it makes sense to optimize for cost, speed and performance weโ€™ll bake SDN features into hardware, and then work on the next generation of stuff in the software and over time weโ€™ll bake that into the hardware,โ€ Sarwar Raza, director of HPโ€™s advanced technology group,โ€ told the conference at the University of Toronto.

โ€œHardware does not stop being important.โ€

The one-day symposium was sponsored by HP to bring its researchers together with those from the UofTโ€™s department of electrical and computer engineering and exchange ideas.

SDN and wireless technologies were the focus of the day.

For example, Kyu-Han Kim, mobility research manager at HP Labs in California, talked about his groupโ€™s work on bringing location-based capabilities to Wi-Fi networks.

These services on smart phones using GPS technology are well-known. But enabling the same capabilities on indoor Wi-Fi networks is difficult because multipath interference makes it hard to pinpoint the location of a device.

Kim said existing systems need a prior-site survey, require special hardware or need an app on the end-userโ€™s device and can have an error of up to 10 meters.

HP is working on a technology it dubs CUPID which calculates distance based on a direct signal from an access point and ignores reflected signals that distort the distance.

In tests CUPID can be accurate to 2 meters.

The technology isnโ€™t near commercialization โ€” HP still has to work on honing the system to distinguish between people on the first and second floor of a building among other problems.

But if it works, like cellular location services it could be used by retailers in malls to send coupons to customers walking past stores, send helpful maps to people in airports or audio commentary to people in museums standing in front of particular works of art.

Ashish Khisti, an assistant professor and Canada Research Chair in wireless networks at the universityโ€™s signals, multimedia and security laboratory, described work being done to improve the protocol stack in wireless networks to improve overall security and latency for multimedia applications.

Stephane Laroche of HPโ€™s Montreal mobility painted a picture of the coming expansion of the 802.11ac version of Wi-Fi, which promises wireless speeds of up to 1.3 Gbps under ideal conditions. The first wave of products is just hitting the market using a draft version of the standard, while a second wave with the ability to send multiple streams to users will likely come out in 2015.

UofTโ€™s Alberto Leon-Garcia talked about his groupโ€™s work to test the idea of a wireless carrier network that can automatically change to meet fluctuating demand.

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