Today’s market gravitates towards easy, ubiquitous access to advanced broadband services. People want to connect to a broadband network for business and personal use, irrespective of time, terminal or location. Currently, from an application’s point of view, Internet connectivity is usually provided using a single link at each point in time. It is however increasingly common that devices such as laptops, phones, and PDAs are equipped with multiple wireless interfaces. Motivated by these trends, wireless providers are looking for solutions that can fully utilise multiple technologies concurrently when present.
The MANGO project is funded by the Research Council of Norway as part of the EUREKA Cluster CELTIC. The ambition of CELTIC is to strengthen European competitiveness in telecommunications through industry-driven, collaborative research and development. In the MANGO project, SI collaborates closely with two other Norwegian partners, Lividi AS and Telenor Research and Innovation. Together, Simula and Telenor study different business models for selected multilink scenarios, and SI is particularly focusing on business models for the results obtained from the SimTel project.
For more information about Mango follow this link:
http://www.forskningsradet.no/servlet/Satellite?c=Prosjekt&cid=1215006659190&pagename=verdikt/Hovedsidemal&p=1226993814962
