Opentopia Directory Encyclopedia Tools

Digital Enhanced Cordless Telecommunications

Encyclopedia : D : DI : DIG : Digital Enhanced Cordless Telecommunications


DECT or Digital Enhanced (formerly European) Cordless Telecommunications is an ETSI standard for digital portable phones, commonly used for domestic or corporate purposes. DECT can also be used for wireless data transfers.

The base unit and handset of a British Telecom DECT cordless telephone
Enlarge
The base unit and handset of a British Telecom DECT cordless telephone

Some other DECT properties:

DECT physical layer uses: This means that the radio spectrum is divided into physical channels in two dimensions: frequency and time.

The power emitted from portable equipment as well as base stations is 100mW.

DECT media access control layer is the layer which controls the physical layer and provides connection oriented, connectionless and broadcast services to the higher layers. It also provides encryption services with the DSC Cipher (DECT Standard Cipher).

DECT data link layer uses a variant of the ISDN data link protocol called LAPC. They are based on HDLC.

DECT network layer contains various protocol entities:

All these communicate through a Link Control Entity (LCE).

The call control protocol is derived from ISDN DSS1, which is a Q.931 derived protocol. Many DECT specific changes have been made.

There are four application areas in use in Europe:

DECT GAP is an interoperability profile for DECT. The intent is that two different products from different manufacturers that both conform not only to the DECT standard, but also to the GAP profile defined within the DECT standard, are able to interoperate for basic calling. In other words, any phone that supports GAP can be registered with any base station that also supports it, and be used to make and receive calls. They will not necessarily be able to access advanced features of the base station, such as remote operation of an answering machine built into the base. Most consumer-level DECT phones and base stations support the GAP profile, even ones that do not publicise this feature, and thus can be used together.

DECT was developed by ETSI but has since been adopted by many countries all over the world. DECT is used in all countries in Europe, outside Europe it is used in most of Asia, Australia and South-America. As of 2005, the FCC changed channelization and licensing costs in a portion of 1900 MHz range spectrum which allowed DECT devices to be used without expensive changes. DECT will operate as Unlicensed Personal Communications Services (UPCS).

See also

External links

 


From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.

Search Titles
0123456789
ABCDEFGHIJ
KLMNOPQRST
UVWXYZ?

E-mail this article to:

Personal Message: