1 © 2007 Nokia Mistä kännykät on tehty Prof. Yrjö Neuvo 26.3.2007.
-
date post
18-Dec-2015 -
Category
Documents
-
view
216 -
download
1
Transcript of 1 © 2007 Nokia Mistä kännykät on tehty Prof. Yrjö Neuvo 26.3.2007.
1 © 2007 Nokia
Mistä kännykät on tehty
Prof. Yrjö Neuvo26.3.2007
2 © 2007 Nokia
Nokia today
850 million peopleglobally use a Nokia
device daily.
• Consumer devices and experiences
• Mobile network equipment, solutions and services
• Solutions for enterprise customers
Supplier to 58 WCDMA networks.9 phones manufactured each second.
Nokia for Business mobilizes enterprises globally.
Sources: Nokia estimates
3 © 2007 NokiaSources: Nokia 2005 & 2006, GSM Association 2006
3 billion mobile subscribers by 2007.
Over 1 billion wireless broadband subscribers by 2009.
Up to 90% of the 6 billion will have mobile coverage by 2010.
We currently expect:
4 © 2007 Nokia
Towards the 3 Billion Milestone
Mobile
phone
subscription
s globally,
millions
Source: Nokia
3 billionin 20073 billionin 2007
0-92 -93 -94 -95 -96 -97 -98 -99 -00 -02-01 -03 -04 -05 -07e
200
400
600
800
1 000
1 200
1 400
1 600
1 800
2 000
2 200
2 400
2 600
2 800
3 000
Current global penetration 33
%
5 © 2007 Nokia
Nokia serves a very diverse customer
base
6 © 2007 Nokia
Impact of decline in Total Cost of Ownership
0
1000
2000
3000
4000
5000
6000
7000
$0 $1 $2 $3 $4 $5 $6 $7 $8 $9 $10 $11 $12 $13 $14 $15 $16 $17
Po
pn
(m
n)
North America Export Brazil Mexico China India
SEAP Advanced SEAP Emerging Japan & Korea Eastern Europe Western Europe MEA
Mobile ownership is now pushing into the circled area. The graph shows that, at these income levels, even a small reduction in the cost of ownership will increase the potential market by a large amount
Income ($/day)
7 © 2007 Nokia
Multimedia computer the truly personal computer
All of my connected
applications, always with me
8 © 2007 Nokia
Nokia N95SPECS
•Up to 160 MB internal dynamic memory
•Up to 2 GB microSD memory cards
•Large 2.6" QVGA (240 x 320 pixels) TFT display. up to 16 million colors
•WiFi (802.11 b/g) and UPnP (Universal Plug and Play)
•WCDMA 2100 (HSDPA) with simultaneous voice and packet data (max speed 3.6Mbps)
•Integrated Bluetooth v.2.0 EDR
•USB 2.0 via Mini USB
•3.5 mm stereo headphone plug and TV out support (PAL/NTSC)
•5 megapixel camera (2592 x 1944 pixels), Carl Zeiss optics, Tessar lens
•Integrated flash & Auto focus
•MPEG-4 VGA (640x480) video capture of up to 30 fps
•MP3/AAC/AAC+/eAAC+/WMA/M4A support
•Stereo FM radio (87.5-108MHz /76-90MHz) with Visual Radio support
•Built-in GPS
•Nokia Web Browser with Mini map
9 © 2007 Nokia
Connected camera
Nokia N95
Carl Zeiss optics
5 megapixels
Auto focus
Online sharing
10 © 2007 Nokia
11 © 2007 Nokia
12 © 2007 Nokia
400% of original size
13 © 2007 Nokia
Maps and navigation
City guides to help you find the points of interest
GPS, maps and navigation to find your way in the world
Nokia N95
Now you’ll never get lost again!
14 © 2007 Nokia
1 2 3 4 5
118
Antennas
2G/3GCellular
WLANBlue toot
hDVB-H GPS
FMUWBNFC
diversity RX
7
9 10
6
Diverging application needs are driving for diversity of radios
2G/3G together with
• UWB, WLAN, RFID, Bluetooth, FM Radio, DVB-H, GPS, …
Multiradio integration
15 © 2007 Nokia
Wibree brings ease of integration, low power and low cost
• Easy integration with Bluetooth – minor digital additions to BTH chip
• Bluetooth-equivalent performance• Lower power consumption• Low production cost• Small size• Streamlined usability (UI, pairing)
Stand-Alone IC
Dual-Mode IC
ISM bandwidth
2.4 GHz 2.4 GHz
Data rate 1 Mbps 1 Mbps
Range 5-10 m 5-10 m
Power BTH x 10-25% BTH x 75-80%
Size <6 mm² BTH + 0.2 mm²
16 © 2007 Nokia
Extending the application domain, NFC
• Near Field Communications (NFC) allows users to easily & safely use their phones to interact with devices and services with just a simple touch, thereby making the phone a more essential part of the user’s life.
• Potential use-cases:• Payment
• Ticketing
• Service discovery
• Other smart card application• Access control
• Loyalty programs
• etc.
17 © 2007 Nokia
Architecture of a mobile device
18 © 2007 Nokia
Lowest Cost Architecture
• Limited interface support
• Single-chip is attractive, if it meets cost, yieldand performance targets
RF
DSP
BBRF
DISPLAY
Charger
Headset / audio
Application, Core and Protocol SW
19 © 2007 Nokia
Architecture of a Multimedia Device
… etc …
FM radio
DVB-H
WLAN
Display
Camera
Input Device
ASIC
System LogicDSPMCUSRAM
RFIF
Audio CodecBB regulatorsEnergy mgmt
ASIC
SDRAMSTD
FlashSTDSTD
System ChipGSM/EDGE/WCDMA/CDMA2000
Analog Chip
Antennas,RF
FlashSTD
HW acceler.DSPMCUSRAM
ASIC
Multimedia Chip
Application SW
Symbian OS
GPS
Protocol SW
Bluetooth
Memory
Card
20 © 2007 Nokia
Open Interfaces
Mobile Industry Processor Interface (MIPI) promotesfaster and broader adoption of interface standards
MIPI CompliantMultimedia Chip
FlrDA
I2S
I2C
Modem I/F
SDRAM Controller
NAND Controller
GPIOs LCD I/F
USB OTG
MMCSD
Camera IF
UART
PCM
Keyboard
I2C orSPI
Audio
Codec
Power
Management
Modem
BlueToothMobileDDR
NANDFlash
LCD CtrlUSB
LCDDisplay
IrDA
21 © 2007 Nokia
Block Diagram of a Cellular PhoneBiCMOS
GaAs HBT
0.25m CMOS
0.13m CMOS
720mAh
~ ÷
BatteryChargingControl
Regulators
PowerSupply
ADCDAC
AudioCodec
BottomConnector
SIM card
Mixed-Signal
BBMemory
ControlInterfacesLogic
DSP160 MHz
MCU50 MHz
SRAM
Flash
Keyboard
LCDBacklight
LCD
64 Mbit
128x12864k colors
Infra Red
Vibra
Microphone
Earpiece
HandsfreeSYNTH
PA
RF1900
1800
900
900
1800/190
0
22 © 2007 Nokia
POWER,W
3
2
6
2004
2002
Gross Power Consumption Exceeds Thermal Dissipation Capability of Mobile Device
4
1
5
2006
COOLING REQUIRED
100cc plastic monoblock
100cc metal monoblock
100cc plastic clamshell,open
Cellular RF Cellular RF
Miscellaneous
Cellular BBCellular BB
Local Connectivity
Local Connectivity
Local Connectivity
Display+backlight
Display+backlight
Display+backlight
Camera
Camera
Cellular RF
Audio
Audio
Audio
Apps Engine
Apps Engine
Mass Memory
Mass Memory
Power conversion
Power conversion
Power conversion
Cellular BB
Large plastic communicator,open
Small metal communicator,open
23 © 2007 Nokia