The 3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP) is a collaboration between groups of telecommunications associations, known as the Organizational Partners. The initial scope of 3GPP was to make a globally applicable third-generation (3G) mobile phone system specification based on evolved Global System for Mobile Communications (GSM) specifications within the scope of the International Mobile Telecommunications-2000 project of the International Telecommunication Union (ITU). The scope was later enlarged[1] to include the development and maintenance of:
3GPP standardization encompasses Radio, Core Network and Service architecture.[2] The project was established in December 1998 and should not be confused with 3rd Generation Partnership Project 2 (3GPP2), which specifies standards for another 3G technology based on IS-95 (CDMA), commonly known as CDMA2000. The 3GPP support team (also known as the "Mobile Competence Centre") is located at the ETSI headquarters in Sophia-Antipolis (France).[3]
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The six 3GPP Organizational Partners are from Asia, Europe and North America. Their aim is to determine the general policy and strategy of 3GPP and perform the following tasks:
Together with the Market Representation Partners (MRPs) perform the following tasks:
Organization | Procedence | CEO | Website |
---|---|---|---|
The Association of Radio Industries and Businesses (ARIB) | Japan | Tatsuyoshi Nakamura | www.arib.or.jp |
The Alliance for Telecommunications Industry Solutions (ATIS) | USA | Steve Barclay | www.atis.org |
China Communications Standards Association (CCSA) | China | Shizhuo Zhao | www.ccsa.org.cn |
The European Telecommunications Standards Institute (ETSI) | Europe | Susanna Kooistra | www.etsi.org |
Telecommunications Technology Association (TTA) | Korea | Hyoung Jin Choi | www.tta.or.kr |
Telecommunication Technology Committee (TTC) | Japan | Takeshi Sugiyama | www.ttc.or.jp |
The 3GPP Organizational Partners can invite a Market Representation Partner to take part in 3GPP, which:
As of December 2011 the Market Representation Partners are:
Organization | Website |
---|---|
IMS Forum | www.imsforum.org |
TD-Forum | www.tdscdma-forum.org |
GSA | www.gsacom.com |
GSM Association | www.gsmworld.com |
IPV6 Forum | www.ipv6forum.com |
UMTS Forum | www.umts-forum.org |
4G Americas | www.4gamericas.org |
TD SCDMA Industry Alliance | www.tdscdma-alliance.org |
InfoCommunication Union | www.icu.org.ru |
Femto Forum | www.femtoforum.org/femto |
CDMA Development Group | www.cdg.org |
Cellular Operators Association of India (COAI) | www.coai.com |
NGMN Alliance | www.ngmn.org |
3GPP standards are structured as Releases. Discussion of 3GPP thus frequently refers to the functionality in one release or another.
Version[4] | Released[5] | Info |
---|---|---|
Phase 1 | 1992 | GSM Features |
Phase 2 | 1995 | GSM Features, EFR Codec, |
Release 96 | 1997 Q1 | GSM Features, 14.4 kbit/s User Data Rate, |
Release 97 | 1998 Q1 | GSM Features, GPRS |
Release 98 | 1999 Q1 | GSM Features, AMR, EDGE, GPRS for PCS1900 |
Release 99 | 2000 Q1 | Specified the first UMTS 3G networks, incorporating a CDMA air interface[6] |
Release 4 | 2001 Q2 | Originally called the Release 2000 - added features including an all-IP Core Network[7] |
Release 5 | 2002 Q1 | Introduced IMS and HSDPA[8] |
Release 6 | 2004 Q4 | Integrated operation with Wireless LAN networks and adds HSUPA, MBMS, enhancements to IMS such as Push to Talk over Cellular (PoC), GAN[9] |
Release 7 | 2007 Q4 | Focuses on decreasing latency, improvements to QoS and real-time applications such as VoIP.[10] This specification also focus on HSPA+ (High Speed Packet Access Evolution), SIM high-speed protocol and contactless front-end interface (Near Field Communication enabling operators to deliver contactless services like Mobile Payments), EDGE Evolution. |
Release 8 | 2008 Q4 | First LTE release. All-IP Network (SAE). New OFDMA, FDE and MIMO based radio interface, not backwards compatible with previous CDMA interfaces. Dual-Cell HSDPA. |
Release 9 | 2009 Q4 | SAES Enhancements, WiMAX and LTE/UMTS Interoperability. Dual-Cell HSDPA with MIMO, Dual-Cell HSUPA. |
Release 10 | 2011 Q1 | LTE Advanced fulfilling IMT Advanced 4G requirements. Backwards compatible with release 8 (LTE). Multi-Cell HSDPA (4 carriers). |
Release 11 | Planned to 2012 Q3 | Advanced IP Interconnection of Services. Service layer interconnection between national operators/carriers as well as third party application providers. Content still open (as of April 2011). |
Each release incorporates hundreds of individual standards documents, each of which may have been through many revisions. Current 3GPP standards incorporate the latest revision of the GSM standards.
The documents are available freely on 3GPP's Web site. While 3GPP standards can be bewildering to the newcomer, they are remarkably complete and detailed, and provide insight into how the cellular industry works. They cover not only the radio part ("Air Interface") and Core Network, but also billing information and speech coding down to source code level. Cryptographic aspects (authentication, confidentiality) are also specified in detail. 3GPP2 offers similar information about its system.
The 3GPP specification work is done in Technical Specification Groups (TSGs) and Working Groups (WGs).[11]
There are four Technical Specifications Groups:
The 3GPP structure also includes a Project Coordination Group, which is the highest decision-making body. Its missions include the management of overall timeframe and work progress.
3GPP standardization work is contribution-driven. Companies ("individual members") participate through their membership to a 3GPP Organizational Partner. As of April 2011, 3GPP is composed of more than 370 individual members[12].
Specification work is done at WG and at TSG level[13]:
3GPP follows a three-stage methodology as defined in ITU-T Recommendation I.130[14]:
Test specifications are sometimes defined as stage 4, as they follow stage 3.
Specifications are grouped into releases. A release consists of a set of internally consistent set of features and specifications.
Timeframes are defined for each release by specifying freezing dates. Once a release is frozen, only essential corrections are allowed (i.e. addition and modifications of functions are forbidden). Freezing dates are defined for each stage.
The 3GPP specifications are transposed into deliverables by the Organizational Partners.
3GPP systems are deployed across much of the established GSM market.[15][16] They are primarily Release 6 systems, but as of 2010, growing interest in HSPA+ and LTE is driving adoption of Release 7 and its successors. Since 2005, 3GPP systems were seeing deployment in the same markets as 3GPP2 systems (for example, North America[17]). With LTE the official successor to 3GPP2's CDMA systems, 3GPP-based systems will eventually become the single global mobile standard.
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