Understand about 2G
Thanks to some of our shrewd and crooked politicians,
make more technological knowhow, even to a layman through their well organized and
simpler way of minting and siphoning cores of money!! India has unique record
of not sending a single political person behind bars after successful court judgment.
This could be also a similar one though it is termed as sensational one. Human
memory is short and this is well understood by all politician and make merry!!!
One such latest one talked by one and all is 2G
spectrum scam. I try to understand on this scam as well as what is that 2G
itself!!
I am sharing with others too for better understanding
on this subject.    
What is 2G spectrum scam?
(As
read at NDTV)
The
2G spectrum scam involved
officials and ministers in the Government of India
illegally undercharging mobile
telephony companies for frequency
allocation licenses, which they would use to create 2G subscriptions for cell phones.
According to a report submitted by the Comptroller
and Auditor General based on money collected from 3G licenses, the loss to
the exchequer was  176,379 crore (US$38.27 billion). The issuing of the 2G
licenses occurred in 2008, but the scam came to public notice when the Indian Income Tax Department investigated
political lobbyist Niira Radia and the Supreme Court
of India took Subramaniam
Swamy's complaints on record [With Case type: Writ Petition
(Civil),Case No:10, Year:2011].The case details of the main PIL filed with the supreme court is Type:
Writ Petition (Civil),Case No:423, Year:2010
176,379 crore (US$38.27 billion). The issuing of the 2G
licenses occurred in 2008, but the scam came to public notice when the Indian Income Tax Department investigated
political lobbyist Niira Radia and the Supreme Court
of India took Subramaniam
Swamy's complaints on record [With Case type: Writ Petition
(Civil),Case No:10, Year:2011].The case details of the main PIL filed with the supreme court is Type:
Writ Petition (Civil),Case No:423, Year:2010
 176,379 crore (US$38.27 billion). The issuing of the 2G
licenses occurred in 2008, but the scam came to public notice when the Indian Income Tax Department investigated
political lobbyist Niira Radia and the Supreme Court
of India took Subramaniam
Swamy's complaints on record [With Case type: Writ Petition
(Civil),Case No:10, Year:2011].The case details of the main PIL filed with the supreme court is Type:
Writ Petition (Civil),Case No:423, Year:2010
176,379 crore (US$38.27 billion). The issuing of the 2G
licenses occurred in 2008, but the scam came to public notice when the Indian Income Tax Department investigated
political lobbyist Niira Radia and the Supreme Court
of India took Subramaniam
Swamy's complaints on record [With Case type: Writ Petition
(Civil),Case No:10, Year:2011].The case details of the main PIL filed with the supreme court is Type:
Writ Petition (Civil),Case No:423, Year:2010
.
In
2008, the Income Tax department, after orders from the ministry of Home and the
PMO, began tapping the phones of Niira Radia. This was done to help with an
ongoing investigation 
into a case where it was alleged that Niira Radia had
acted as a spy.
Some
of the many conversations recorded over 300 days were leaked to the media. The
intense controversy around the leaked tapes, became known in the media as the Radia tapes
controversy. The tapes featured some explosive conversations between
Politicians, Journalists and Corporate Houses. Politicians from Karunanidhi
to Arun Jaitley, journalists
like Barkha Dutt and
Vir Sanghvi and Industrial
groups like the Tata's were either participants or mentioned in these explosive
tapes.
WHAT IS SPECTRUM SCAM?
- 2G licenses
     issued to private telecom players at throwaway prices in 2008
- CAG: Spectrum
     scam has cost the government Rs. 1.76 lakh crore
- CAG: Rules and
     procedures flouted while issuing licenses
WHAT ARE THE CHARGES ON
FORMER TELECOM MINISTER A RAJA?
 
CHEAP TELECOM LICENSES
CHEAP TELECOM LICENSES
-  Entry fee
     for spectrum licenses in 2008 pegged at 2001 prices 
-  Mobile
     subscriber base had shot up to 350 million in 2008 from 4 million in 2001
NO PROCEDURES FOLLOWED
- Rules changed
     after the game had begun
- Cut-off date for
     applications advanced by a week
- Licenses issued
     on a first-come-first-served basis
- No proper
     auction process followed, no bids invited
- Raja ignored
     advice of TRAI, Law Ministry, Finance Ministry
- TRAI had
     recommended auctioning of spectrum at market rates 
 FAVOURITISM,
CORPORATES ENCASH PREMIUM
- Unitech, Swan
     Telecom got licenses without any prior telecom experience
- Swan Telecom
     given license even though it did not meet eligibility criteria
- Swan got license
     for Rs. 1537 crore, sold 45% stake to Etisalat for Rs. 4200 crore
- Unitech Wireless
     got license for Rs. 1661 crore, sold 60% stake for Rs. 6200 crore
- All nine
     companies paid DoT only Rs. 10,772 crore for 2G licences
What is 2G?
Before
going into this, some background to understand better on this mobile telephone.
Mobile radio telephone
These
early mobile telephone systems can be distinguished from earlier closed radiotelephone
systems in that they were available as a commercial service that was part of
the public switched telephone network, with their own telephone numbers, rather
than part of a closed network such as a police radio or taxi dispatch system.
These
mobile telephones were usually mounted in cars or trucks, though briefcase
models were also made. Typically, the transceiver (transmitter-receiver) was
mounted in the vehicle 
trunk and attached to the "head" (dial,
display, and handset) mounted near the driver seat.
1G
1G
(or 1-G) refers to the first-generation of wireless telephone technology, mobile
telecommunications. These are the analog
telecommunications standards that were introduced in the 1980s and continued
until being replaced by 2G digital
telecommunications. The main difference between two succeeding mobile telephone
systems, 1G and 2G, is that the radio signals that 1G networks use are analog,
while 2G networks are digital.
Although
both systems use digital signaling to connect the radio towers (which listen to
the handsets) to the rest of the telephone system, the voice itself during a
call is encoded to digital signals in 2G whereas 1G is only modulated to higher
frequency, typically 150 MHz and up.
2G
2G
(or 2-G) is short for second-generation wireless telephone technology. Second
generation 2G cellular telecom networks were commercially launched on the GSM
standard in Finland by Radiolinja (now part of Elisa Oyj) in 1991. Three
primary benefits of 2G networks over their predecessors were that phone
conversations were digitally encrypted;
2G systems were significantly more efficient on the spectrum allowing for far
greater mobile phone penetration levels; and 2G introduced data services for
mobile, starting with SMS text messages.
After
2G was launched, the previous mobile telephone systems were retrospectively
dubbed 1G. While radio signals on 1G networks are analog, radio signals on 2G
networks are digital. Both systems use digital signaling to connect the radio
towers (which listen to the handsets) to the rest of the telephone system.
2G
has been superseded by newer technologies such as 2.5G, 2.75G, 3G, and 4G;
however, 2G networks are still used in many parts of the world.
2G technologies
2G
technologies can be divided into TDMA-based and CDMA-based standards depending on the type
of multiplexing used. The
main 2G standards are:
- GSM (TDMA-based),
     originally from Europe but used in almost all countries on all six
     inhabited continents. Today accounts for over 80% of all subscribers
     around the world. Over 60 GSM operators are also using CDMA2000 in the
     450 MHz frequency band (CDMA450]
- IS-95 aka cdmaOne
     (CDMA-based, commonly referred as simply CDMA
     in the US), used in the Americas and parts of Asia. Today accounts for
     about 17% of all subscribers globally. Over a dozen CDMA operators have
     migrated to GSM including operators in Mexico, India, Australia and South
     Korea.
- PDC (TDMA-based),
     used exclusively in Japan
- iDEN
     (TDMA-based), proprietary network used by Nextel
     in the United
     States and Telus Mobility in Canada
- IS-136
     aka D-AMPS
     (TDMA-based, commonly referred as simply 'TDMA' in the US), was once
     prevalent in the Americas but most have migrated to GSM.
2G
services are frequently referred as Personal
Communications Service, or PCS, in the United States.
Capacities,
advantages, and disadvantages
Capacity
Using
digital
signals between the handsets and the towers increases system capacity in two key
ways:
- Digital voice
     data can be compressed and multiplexed
     much more effectively than analog voice encodings through the use of
     various codecs,
     allowing more calls to be packed into the same amount of radio bandwidth.
- The digital
     systems were designed to emit less radio power from the handsets. This
     meant that cells could be smaller, so more cells
     could be placed in the same amount of space. This was also made possible
     by cell
     towers and related equipment getting less expensive.
Advantages
- The lower power
     emissions helped address health concerns.
- Going
     all-digital allowed for the introduction of digital data services, such as
     SMS and email.
- Greatly reduced fraud. With analog
     systems it was possible to have two or more "cloned"
     handsets that had the same phone number.
- Enhanced
     privacy. A key digital advantage not often mentioned is that digital
     cellular calls are much harder to eavesdrop on by use
     of radio scanners. While the security algorithms used
     have proved not to be as secure as initially advertised, 2G phones are
     immensely more private than 1G phones, which have no protection against
     eavesdropping.
Disadvantages
- In less populous
     areas, the weaker digital signal may not be sufficient to reach a cell
     tower. This tends to be a particular problem on 2G systems deployed on
     higher frequencies, but is mostly not a problem on 2G systems deployed on
     lower frequencies. National regulations differ greatly among countries
     which dictate where 2G can be deployed.
- Analog has a
     smooth decay curve, digital a jagged steppy one. This can be both an
     advantage and a disadvantage. Under good conditions, digital will sound
     better. Under slightly worse conditions, analog will experience static,
     while digital has occasional dropouts. As conditions worsen,
     though, digital will start to completely fail, by dropping calls or being
     unintelligible, while analog slowly gets worse, generally holding a call
     longer and allowing at least a few words to get through.
- While digital
     calls tend to be free of static
     and background
     noise, the lossy
     compression used by the codecs takes a toll; the range of sound
     that they convey is reduced. You'll hear less of the tonality of someone's
     voice talking on a digital cellphone, but you will hear it more clearly.
Evolution
2G
networks were built mainly for voice services and slow data transmission.
Some
protocols, such as EDGE for GSM and 1x-RTT for CDMA2000, are defined as
"3G" services (because they are defined in IMT-2000 specification
documents), but are considered by the general public to be 2.5G services (or
2.75G which sounds even more sophisticated) because they are several times slower
than present-day 3G services.
2.5G
(GPRS)
2.5G
is a stepping stone between 2G and 3G cellular wireless technologies. The term
"second and a half generation   is used to describe 2G-systems that have
implemented a packet switched domain in addition to the circuit switched domain.
It does not necessarily provide faster services because bundling of timeslots
is used for circuit switched data services (HSCSD) as well.
GPRS
could provide data rates from 56 kbit/s up to 115 kbit/s. It can be used for
services such as Wireless Application Protocol (WAP) access, Multimedia
Messaging Service (MMS), and for Internet communication services such as email
and World Wide Web access. GPRS data transfer is typically charged per megabyte
of traffic transferred, while data communication via traditional circuit
switching is billed per minute of connection time, independent of whether the
user actually is utilizing the capacity or is in an idle state.
1xRTT
supports bi-directional (up and downlink) peak data rates up to 153.6 kbit/s,
delivering an average user data throughput of 80-100 kbit/s in commercial networks
It can also be used for WAP, SMS & MMS services, as well as Internet
access.
2.75G
(EDGE)
GPRS
networks evolved to EDGE
networks with the introduction of 8PSK encoding. Enhanced Data rates for GSM
Evolution (EDGE),
Enhanced GPRS (EGPRS), or IMT Single Carrier (IMT-SC) is a backward-compatible
digital mobile phone technology that allows improved data transmission rates,
as an extension on top of standard GSM. EDGE was deployed on GSM networks
beginning in 2003—initially by Cingular (now AT&T) in the United States.
EDGE
is standardized by 3GPP as part of the GSM family and it is an upgrade that
provides a potential three-fold increase in capacity of GSM/GPRS networks. The
specification achieves higher data-rates (up to 236.8 kbit/s) by switching to
more sophisticated methods of coding (8PSK), within existing GSM time slots.
Further
we have 3G,4G, 5G phones. This is the out come of constant technological advancement and research.
 
1 comment:
Very good info ...systematically compiled.
krishnakumar
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