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Asymptotically Reliable Transport
of Multimedia/Graphics Over
Wireless Channels
Richard Y. Han and David. G.
Messerschmitt
Proc. Multimedia Computing and
Networking, San Jose, CA, Jan. 29-31, 1996
We propose a
multiple-delivery transport service tailored for graphics and video transported
over connections with wireless access. This service operates at the interface
between the transport and application layers,
balancing the subjective delay and image quality objectives of the application
with the low reliability and limited bandwidth of the wireless link. While
techniques like forward-error correction,
interleaving and retransmission improve reliability over wireless links, they
also increase latency substantially when bandwidth
is limited. Certain forms of interactive multimedia datatypes
can benefit from an initial delivery of a corrupt packet to lower the perceptual
latency, as long as reliable delivery occurs
eventually. Multiple delivery of successively refined versions of the received
packet, terminating when a sufficiently reliable
version arrives, exploits the redundancy inherently required
to improve reliability without a traffic penalty. Modifications to
acknowledgment-repeat-request(ARQ) methods to implement this transport service
are proposed, which we term "leaky ARQ". For the specific
case of pixel-coded window-based text/graphics, we describe additional functions
needed to more effectively support urgent
delivery and asymptotic reliability. X server emulation suggests that users
will accept a multi-second delay between a (possibly corrupt) packet and the
ultimate reliably-delivered version. The
relaxed delay for reliable delivery can be exploited for traffic capacity
improvement using scheduling of retransmissions.

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