Cellular mobile telephone network operation

Telecommunications – Radiotelephone system – Zoned or cellular telephone system

Reexamination Certificate

Rate now

  [ 0.00 ] – not rated yet Voters 0   Comments 0

Details

C455S437000, C455S424000, C370S332000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06801772

ABSTRACT:

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to tailoring neighbouring base station information transmitted in a first cellular telephone network on the basis of the relationship between a subscriber and a second network.
2. Related Art
The present invention will be described with reference to the GSM (Global System for Mobile communication) standard because the skilled person is familiar with this standard and will, therefore, more easily be able to understand how to implement a system according the present invention. Furthermore, details of conventional GSM are readily available from publications such as Mouly, M. et al, “
The GSM System for Mobile Communications
”, ISBN 2-9507190-0-7. However, the present invention is not merely a variant of GSM and may be applied to other cellular mobile telephone systems. Accordingly, terms having particular meanings within GSM are not to be construed as limiting the scope of protection sought to GSM systems.
GSM provides for a plurality of service providers to make available respective public land mobile networks within an area covered by the same regulatory authority. Typically the regulatory authority is a national PTT (Post, Telephone and Telegraph) authority.
Roaming between public land mobile networks in the same area may be provided by service providers. Assuming that a subscriber is able to roam between two networks, a choice needs to be made between the available networks. The subscriber's mobile station could scan all frequencies and register with the network having the strongest signal. This unfortunately is time consuming and very demanding on power. Consequently, in order to maximise battery life, GSM900, phase 1 adopts the practice of the serving base station transmitting a list of beacon identities of neighbouring base stations, and the mobile station only scans these identities. This approach is not optimum from the point of view of service providers because once a subscriber has roamed to another network, for instance as a result of a discontinuity in the coverage provided by the subscriber's home network, the subscriber will not return to his home network until the subscriber manually instructs his mobile station to register with his home network, he enters a discontinuity in the coverage of the current network or switches his mobile station off and then on again.
This is particularly undesirable when the home network is a private network, on which additional services or reduced call changes are available to its users. The private network may comprise a single base station, as is disclosed in International Patent Application WO98/03002. In the system described therein, a dual-mode cordless/cellular telephone (for example operational on the DECT and GSM standards) can have incoming calls, initially directed to the fixed telephone line associated with the cordless function, diverted to the handset's cellular identity when the cordless base station cannot detect the presence of the handset. However, if the handset is carried into or out of range of the cordless base station while a call is in progress, the call will continue on the system in which it was initiated, or fall if radio contact is lost on that system.
International Patent Specification WO94/06220 discloses a system in which there is a supplementary network whose base stations have a dedicated range of frequencies separate from that of the main network. Mobile stations having access to the supplementary network are arranged to scan these frequencies and use such base stations when available. However, as already discussed, this is very demanding on power and is time consuming. Moreover, it requires the supplementary network and main network to operate on distinct frequency ranges. This requires specialised mobile units capable of operation in both ranges, and precludes efficient frequency re-use. For example, International Patent Specification WO97/14261 discloses a system in which separate handover arrangements are provided for single-band and multi-band mobile units, in areas where some bands are not universally available.
BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
According to a first aspect of the present invention, there is provided a method of operating a cellular telephone system having a subset of base stations only available to some subscribers to the system, the method comprising:
transmitting, to each mobile station, neighbouring base station data for constructing a list of beacon identities for base stations neighbouring the mobile station's serving base station, the transmission being made in a control channel, dedicated to the particular mobile station, wherein the list of beacon identities includes members of the said subset only if the subset is available to the mobile station's subscriber,
receiving signal reports from the mobile station for the plurality of bass stations, and selecting a base station for use by the mobile station based on said reports and on whether the base station is a member of the subset,
the handover being controlled such that mobile stations for which access to the subset of base stations is permitted are not handed over to base stations not forming part of the subset unless the signal reports for the base stations indicate that reliable communication cannot be effected between the mobile station and any member of the subset.
By selecting the neighbour list according to the user identity, private cellular networks may be defined using the same frequency bands as the main network, with standard mobile units having permission to use the private network able to switch between systems automatically, but preferentially using the private network.
“Beacon identity” means the identity of a beacon on which a mobile station can meaningfully make signal strength/quality measurements. The neighbouring base station data may itself include beacon identities in the form of their actual frequency in Hz, kHz, MHz, rad/s etc. or a channel number. Alternatively, the neighbouring base station data may comprise data from which the mobile station can derive the beacon frequency, e.g. by an algorithm relating a base station identity code to beacon frequency. Similarly, the beacon frequency list need not literally comprise a list of frequencies. Rather the list must merely contain data sufficient for the mobile station to tune to the beacon, for example the scrambling code of a CDMA (code division multiple access) system.
In GSM, the use of SIM (subscriber identity module) cards means that the system features available to a subscriber are largely independent of the particular mobile station because they are governed by the SIM, which may be in many different mobile stations. However, the present invention is also applicable to systems in which a subscriber's identity corresponds to a mobile station's identity.
The base stations of the subset may be those of one network whilst those not in the subset may belong to one or more other networks. These networks may be physically distinct or logically distinct. Logically distinct networks may use the same hardware, for instance in the case of a virtual private network provided by a public land mobile network operator.
The present invention may be used to assist in the integration of a private cellular mobile telephone network and a public cellular mobile telephone network. However, it can be applied to the solution of many problems, including, but not exclusively so, handover between public networks at national borders for subscribers with roaming privileges. In this case, the mobile station of a subscriber with roaming privileges would be informed of beacon identities of the base stations of the network privileges would be informed of beacon identities of the base stations of the network in a neighbouring country when approaching the border in dedicated mode. Handover to a foreign network would only take place if signal quality on the home network (measured either as an absolute value or relative to the foreign network) fell below a specifie

LandOfFree

Say what you really think

Search LandOfFree.com for the USA inventors and patents. Rate them and share your experience with other people.

Rating

Cellular mobile telephone network operation does not yet have a rating. At this time, there are no reviews or comments for this patent.

If you have personal experience with Cellular mobile telephone network operation, we encourage you to share that experience with our LandOfFree.com community. Your opinion is very important and Cellular mobile telephone network operation will most certainly appreciate the feedback.

Rate now

     

Profile ID: LFUS-PAI-O-3274689

  Search
All data on this website is collected from public sources. Our data reflects the most accurate information available at the time of publication.