Journal of Computer Networks and Communications (Jan 2013)

Angry Apps: The Impact of Network Timer Selection on Power Consumption, Signalling Load, and Web QoE

  • Christian Schwartz,
  • Tobias Hoßfeld,
  • Frank Lehrieder,
  • Phuoc Tran-Gia

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1155/2013/176217
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2013

Abstract

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The popularity of smartphones and mobile applications has experienced a considerable growth during the recent years, and this growth is expected to continue in the future. Since smartphones have only very limited energy resources, battery efficiency is one of the determining factors for a good user experience. Therefore, some smartphones tear down connectionsto the mobile network soon after a completed data transmission to reduce the power consumption of their transmission unit. However, frequent connection reestablishments caused by apps which send or receive small amounts of data often lead to a heavy signalling load within the mobile network. One of the major contributions of this paper is the investigation of the resulting tradeoff between energy consumption at the smartphone and the generated signalling traffic in the mobile network. We explain that this tradeoff can be controlled by the connection release timeout and study the impact of this parameter for a number of popular apps that cover a wide range of traffic characteristics in terms of bandwidth requirements and resulting signalling traffic. Finally, we study the impact of the timer settings on Quality of Experience (QoE) for web traffic. This is an important aspect since connection establishments not only lead to signalling traffic but also increase the load time of web pages.