MIMO + OFDM

Amimon's Video Modem solution utilizes both MIMO and OFDM technologies to allow for the magic of Joint Source Channel Coding (JSCC) capability to transmit full uncompressed 1080p60 HD video resolution over a bandwidth of 40MHz. The multiple-input and multiple-output, or MIMO, is the term used for multiple antennas at both the transmitter and receiver to improve communication performance.


MIMO technology offers a significant increase in data throughput and link range without additional bandwidth or increased transmit power. It achieves this by spreading the same total transmit power over the antennas to achieve an array gain that improves the spectral efficiency (more bits per second per hertz of bandwidth) or to achieve a diversity gain that improves the link reliability (reduced fading). Because of these properties, MIMO is an important part of modern wireless communication standards, such as IEEE 802.11n (Wifi), 4G, 3GPP Long Term Evolution, WiMAX, HSPA+ and – WHDI.

Since spatial multiplexing techniques makes the receivers very complex, MIMO is typically combined with Orthogonal Frequency-Division Multiplexing, or OFDM modulation, where the problems created by multi-path channel are efficiently handled. WHDI standard incorporates MIMO-OFDM (in comparison, the IEEE 802.16e standard incorporates MIMO-OFDMA; and the IEEE 802.11n standard recommends MIMO-OFDM).
Amimon's MIMO implementation allows for 4x5 or 2x5 MIMO channel model.


This means the transmitter sends multiple streams (two or four) by multiple transmit antennas. The transmit streams go through a matrix channel which consists of all possible paths (see diagram below) between the transmit antennas at the transmitter and the receive antennas at the receiver. Then, the receiver gets the received signal vectors by the five receiving antennas and decodes the received signal vectors into the original information.
 

The use of five receiving antennas allows the receiver to choose the "best" four out of five received signals for solving the channel's matrix.

Read more...

WHDI ATC

As part of the WHDI Compliance Program, and as a founding member of WHDI™ consortium, Amimon has established the first Authorized Test Center (ATC) for conducting WHDI certification tests according to the WHDI Compliance Test Certification (CTS).
The aim of the WHDI Compliance Program is to increase the WHDI logo credibility by allowing companies to test their products and/or wireless modules for compliance with WHDI standard.
The tests are done in the ATC, by testing WHDI products in three levels:

  • Compliance with WHDI specification
  • Minimum product performance
  • Interoperability between products (including HDCP 2.0) testing

A product that has received the ATC approval is allowed to carry the WHDI logo (According WHDI logo requirements)
WHDI CTS defines two types of certification:

  • Product Certification - WHDI Product Certification is for products that are sold to the end user
  • Module Certification - A WHDI module is a chip, board or system that can go through the performance testing layer in the CTS

The tests include RF/PHY layer, MAC layer and AVCL layer compliance tests. On the Application layer the tests include usability tests, mainly for registration and user announcements.
Prior to submitting a product for testing, submission forms and product samples should be sent to the WHDI ATC.

Read more...
Video Modem

Video Modem

Practically all of the hundreds of millions of wired connections between video sources and displays today are based on delivery of uncompressed video. In order to replace these wired links, the wireless interface needs to be uncompressed as well.
Solutions that are based on delivery of compressed video do not solve the problem of providing a universal wireless video link that can connect between any source and any display. Although most of the digital sources are distributed to the home in compressed format, compressed video is rarely provided at the output of most video sources such as DVD players and set-top-boxes. One reason for this is copy-protection: compressed outputs are more susceptible and more sensitive to theft. Another reason is that interoperability on the compressed level is extremely challenging as there are so many video codecs, and displays cannot be expected to support all of them. Moreover, there are many sources that are generated uncompressed, such as gaming consoles and PCs.
Other solutions try to overcome this constraint by applying real-time compression to the uncompressed outputs of sources. However, this significantly reduces quality, adds latency and is expensive. (For a more detailed analysis of uncompressed vs. compressed, please refer to the White Paper on this topic – link provided at the end of this page.)
Enabling the wireless delivery of such high video rates calls for a radically different approach for the video transmission. WHDI™ is based on AMIMON’s revolutionary video-modem technology in which the video coding and modulation are jointly optimized to enable capabilities far beyond those of traditional wireless modems that have been optimized for data.
Traditional wireless video approaches have failed to provide an adequate solution to the problem of wireless HDTV connectivity because they treat the problem as a special case of data delivery. In a wireless data modem (e.g. 802.11n, MBOA-UWB) all bits are treated equally ― they all get the same level of protection from channel impairments. However, in video, different bits have different level of importance and the effect of an error greatly depend on which bit was corrupted.
For example, a typical uncompressed stream is represented by a stream of eight or ten bit numbers, each representing the primary color value of a given pixel. Clearly, the most significant bit (MSB) of each of these numbers has greater visual importance than the least significant bit (LSB). If an error occurs on the MSB, that pixel gets an entirely different (and unwanted) value. However, an error in the LSB will result in a minor change in the pixel’s value. Wireless data-modems ignore this characteristic of video. They provide the same level of protection to the MSB and LSB, which means they either protect the LSB too much, resulting in inefficient use of channel capacity, or protect the MSB too little, resulting is a low quality video link; or a combination of both. WHDI™ provides a different level of protection to the different bits, enabling the delivery of very high video rates with very high quality.
Amimon’s Video-Modem takes the uncompressed HD video stream and breaks it into elements of importance. The various elements are then mapped onto the wireless channel in a way that gives elements with more visual importance a greater share of the channel resources, i.e. they are transmitted in a more robust manner. Elements that have less visual importance are allocated fewer channel resources and therefore are transmitted in a much less robust way. Allocation of channel resources can include, for example, setting power levels, spectrum allocation and coding parameters.
The result of this unique video-modem approach is that any errors in the wireless channel are not noticed as they only affect the less important bits. Very high rates of video information can be transmitted because the human eye can tolerate the errors that fall on the less important bits.