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Mobile IP has been designed within the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) to serve the needs of the burgeoning population of mobile computer users who wish to connect to the Internet and maintain communications as they move from place to place.
C. Perkins
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IP Paging for Mobile Hosts in Distributed and Fixed Hierarchical Mobile IP
International Journal of Wireless Networks and Broadband Technologies, 2011The concept of Paging has been found useful in existing cellular networks for mobile users with low call-to-mobility ratio (CMR). It is necessary for fast mobility users to minimize the signaling burden on the network. Reduced signaling, also, conserves scarce wireless resources and provides power savings at user terminals.
Sudarshan Tiwari, Paramesh C. Upadhyay
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Distributed mobility management with mobile IP
2012 IEEE International Conference on Communications (ICC), 2012Mobile IP is primarily based on separating session identifier from route locator to support mobility and is comparable to Host Identity Protocol and Locator ID Separation Protocol defined in IETF. One important difference causing a major weakness in MIP is in routing via a centralized anchor point.
H. Chan
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Formal Methods in System Design, 1998
We study a highly simplified version of the proposed mobility support in version 6 of Internet Protocols (IP). We concentrate on the issue of ensuring that messages to and from mobile agents are delivered without loss of connectivity. We provide three models, of increasingly complex nature, of a network of routers and computing agents that are ...
Roberto M. Amadio, Sanjiva Prasad
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We study a highly simplified version of the proposed mobility support in version 6 of Internet Protocols (IP). We concentrate on the issue of ensuring that messages to and from mobile agents are delivered without loss of connectivity. We provide three models, of increasingly complex nature, of a network of routers and computing agents that are ...
Roberto M. Amadio, Sanjiva Prasad
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Seamless mobility across IP networks using Mobile IP
Computer Networks, 2002The landscape of today's telecommunications portrays an amazing patchwork of heterogeneous networks, with very few and complex bridges between them. In this context, IP technology has emerged as a natural means of initiating network convergence and the "All-IP" paradigm has become the implicit assumption for most studies on the next generation ...
L. Morand +6 more
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