Backhaul and Fronthaul Sample Clauses

Backhaul and Fronthaul. (a) The Contractor is entitled to use the containers that are used for the shipment of the City's Waste for the transportation of other commodities and products, on all or part of the rail trip from the Receiving Facility to the Landfill or from the Landfill to the Receiving Facility, with the exception of food products intended for human consumption, commodities and products which are radioactive, dangerous, hazardous or extremely hazardous, unless approved in writing by the Engineering Director. The Contractor may also use other containers or railcars for the transportation of commodities and products, on all or part of the rail trip from the Receiving Facility to the Landfill or from the Landfill to the Receiving Facility.
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Backhaul and Fronthaul. Mobile networks are not only wireless access networks, but also include fixed links which connect base stations to a mobile core or public internet network. These fixed (wired or wireless) links that connect the cellular base stations to each other and the core network, are known as backhaul links, which may form the backhaul network. The technology selection and design of the backhaul links is critical for the achievable performance of the overall service provided over the mobile network. Any limitations on backhaul link capacity would create a bottleneck for possible served capacity of base station utilising the backhaul link. Similarly, the delays over the backhaul link could be a significant contribution to the end-to-end latency experienced by a service provided via a mobile network. A number of small cell backhauling solutions are possible depending on the small cell deployment scenario [NGMN2012, Robson2012]. Indoor-deployed small cells (e.g. enterprise femtos) can be backhauled using existing in-building wireline infrastructure, such as, copper twisted-pair digital subscriber lines (DSL), fibre and coaxial cables (for cable television). Outdoor-deployed small cells in most cases do not have access to legacy cabling and the cost of Greenfield rollout of cables to each small cell would be prohibitive [Robson2012]. Therefore, wireless backhauling solutions are usually considered for outdoor small cells [NGMN2012, Nokia2013, Robson2012]. These include backhauling links based on traditional sub-6 GHz wireless links, microwave/millimetre wave fixed radio links (including links in the 6-50 GHz, 57-66 GHz and 71-95 GHz spectrum regions), free-space optics and satellite. The differentiating attributes for the different wireless backhaul solutions include:  Operating spectrum band: Differs depending on spectrum licensing arrangements (licensed or unlicensed bands). Differences may also be in spectrum allocation between small cell backhaul and access links, whereby, utilized spectrum bands are either overlapping (inband) or orthogonal (outband) between the access and backhaul links.  Capacity: Typical capacity (bits per second) available over the backhaul link. The available capacity for different wireless backhaul solutions depends on the amount available spectrum resources, co-channel interference and radio propagation characteristics for given operating spectrum band (utilised by the backhaul link).  Deployment topology: Configuration between small cell...

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