Holographic Teleportation is an emerging media application allowing people or objects to be teleported in a realtime and immersive fashion into the virtual space of the audience side. Compared to the traditional video content, the network requirements for supporting such applications will be much more challenging. In this paper, we present a 5G edge computing framework for enabling remote production functions for live holographic Teleportation applications. The key idea is to offload complex holographic content production functions from end user premises to the 5G mobile edge in order to substantially reduce the cost of running such applications on the user side. We comprehensively evaluated how specific network-oriented and application-oriented factors may affect the performances of remote production operations based on 5G systems. Specifically, we tested the application performance from the following four dimensions: (1) different data rate requirements with multiple content resolution levels, (2) different transport-layer mechanisms over 5G uplink radio, (3) different indoor/outdoor location environments with imperfect 5G connections and (4) different object capturing scenarios including the number of teleported objects and the number of sensor cameras required. Based on these evaluations we derive useful guidelines and policies for future remote production operation for holographic Teleportation through 5G systems.
Rogues are unwanted whether they are access points or clients as they steal critical data and bandwidth. To detect a rogue access point different approaches are used. These approaches are briefly classified as Client-side approach, Server-side and Hybrid approach. Every approach has its own advantages and disadvantages. Clients have limited resources and do not possess much control over network when compared with servers. Amongst all approaches Hybrid approach is efficient because it minimizes the inabilities of client side approach and adds server control for detection of Rogue Access Points (AP). This paper aims at surveying different methods of rogue Access Point detection.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.