build me a qcm that include questions based on thi...
تم الإنشاء في: ١٣ يناير ٢٠٢٦
تمت الإجابة باستخدام GPT-5.2 Thinking بواسطة Chat01
تم الإنشاء في: ١٣ يناير ٢٠٢٦
تمت الإجابة باستخدام GPT-5.2 Thinking بواسطة Chat01
build me a qcm that include questions based on this pdf that i sent you and at the end send me the solution
Voici un QCM (35 questions) basé sur le PDF que tu as envoyé. (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf)
(1 seule bonne réponse par question.)
Q1. La 1G a été conçue principalement pour :
A) La vidéo en streaming
B) La voix analogique
C) Les SMS
D) L’Internet mobile
Q2. La technique d’accès multiple typique en 1G est :
A) TDMA
B) CDMA
C) OFDMA
D) FDMA
Q3. La modulation utilisée pour la voix en 1G (dans le cours) est :
A) QPSK
B) 16-QAM
C) FM
D) GMSK
Q4. Dans l’architecture 1G, l’élément qui connecte les BTS au réseau téléphonique classique est :
A) HLR
B) MSC
C) RNC
D) SGSN
Q5. En 1G, la largeur de bande typique d’un canal est :
A) 5 MHz
B) 200 kHz
C) 25–30 kHz
D) 1.25 MHz
Q6. FDD signifie :
A) Frequency Division Duplex
B) Fast Data Delivery
C) Full Digital Dispatch
D) Frequency Dynamic Division
Q7. Le FOCC (AMPS) est un canal :
A) Mobile → Base, uniquement voix
B) Base → Mobile, signalisation (infos système, paging, affectation)
C) Mobile → Base, signalisation (encryption)
D) Base → Mobile, uniquement données IP
Q8. Parmi les dimensions de planification, laquelle fait partie du “top 4” présenté ?
A) Coût CAPEX
B) Densité d’appareils
C) Consommation énergétique
D) Qualité vidéo
Q9. En 1G, la priorité de conception (dans le cours) était surtout :
A) La latence
B) La capacité data
C) La couverture
D) Le slicing
Q10. La distance de réutilisation en 1G est donnée par :
A)
B)
C)
D)
Q11. La 2G marque surtout la transition vers :
A) L’analogique
B) Le tout-IP
C) Le numérique (voix + SMS)
D) La 5G NR
Q12. Un apport clé de la 2G (GSM) absent en 1G est :
A) La modulation FM
B) La carte SIM (identité + authentification)
C) Le FDMA
D) La PSTN
Q13. Dans GSM, l’élément qui gère plusieurs BTS est :
A) BSC
B) GMSC
C) EIR
D) UE
Q14. La base qui contient les infos permanentes d’abonné + zone de localisation actuelle est :
A) VLR
B) HLR
C) AuC
D) EIR
Q15. L’EIR sert surtout à :
A) Stocker les clés de chiffrement A5
B) Générer des numéros aléatoires de challenge
C) Suivre les équipements valides/volés via IMEI
D) Router les paquets IP vers Internet
Q16. En GSM (2G), l’espacement/largeur de canal typique est :
A) 25 kHz
B) 30 kHz
C) 200 kHz
D) 5 MHz
Q17. Un carrier GSM est découpé en :
A) 4 time slots
B) 6 time slots
C) 8 time slots
D) 16 time slots
Q18. Le RACH sert principalement à :
A) Diffuser l’ID cellule et la liste des voisins
B) Paginer un mobile en downlink
C) Permettre au mobile de demander l’accès (uplink)
D) Transporter la voix (TCH)
Q19. Le canal souvent utilisé pour authentification / location update / call setup / SMS (signalisation dédiée) est :
A) BCCH
B) SDCCH
C) PCH
D) TCH
Q20. Le TMSI est :
A) L’identité permanente sur la SIM
B) Une identité temporaire attribuée par le VLR pour protéger l’IMSI
C) Une clé de chiffrement A5
D) Un identifiant d’équipement (IMEI)
Q21. IS-95 (cdmaOne) utilise typiquement un canal de :
A) 200 kHz
B) 1.25 MHz
C) 5 MHz
D) 20 MHz
Q22. Une particularité citée de l’IS-95 est :
A) Handover “soft” (connexion à plusieurs BTS)
B) 8 time slots par carrier
C) Modulation 8-PSK obligatoire
D) Architecture RNC + NodeB
Q23. Dans GPRS, le nœud qui gère mobilité/authentification et route les paquets côté radio est :
A) GGSN
B) SGSN
C) MSC
D) HLR
Q24. Dans GPRS, le nœud qui connecte vers les réseaux IP externes et attribue l’IP via PDP context est :
A) BSC
B) BTS
C) SGSN
D) GGSN
Q25. “PDP Context Activation” permet notamment :
A) D’assigner un canal voix TCH
B) D’obtenir une adresse IP et établir le tunnel vers le réseau externe
C) De faire du chiffrement A5
D) De changer la largeur de bande GSM à 5 MHz
Q26. En GPRS, les PDCH sont :
A) Des canaux voix réservés en permanence
B) Des time slots reconfigurés pour le trafic paquets
C) Des liens fibre entre BSC et MSC
D) Des codes d’étalement WCDMA
Q27. “TBF” (Temporary Block Flow) correspond à :
A) Un tunnel IP permanent
B) Un flux logique temporaire uplink ou downlink sur PDCH
C) Un canal de paging GSM classique
D) Une base de données d’abonnés
Q28. Le schéma de codage GPRS le plus robuste (débit le plus bas) est :
A) CS-4
B) CS-3
C) CS-2
D) CS-1
Q29. La sélection dynamique des coding schemes en GPRS se base notamment sur :
A) Température de la BTS
B) C/I et BER
C) Taille de l’écran du téléphone
D) Puissance du réseau PSTN
Q30. Une classe multislot Class 10 correspond (dans les exemples) à :
A) 4 DL + 2 UL (max 5 total)
B) 2 DL + 4 UL (max 6 total)
C) 1 DL + 1 UL (max 2 total)
D) 8 DL + 8 UL (max 16 total)
Q31. EDGE augmente le débit en introduisant notamment :
A) OFDMA
B) 8-PSK (en plus de GMSK)
C) FM analogique
D) NR (New Radio)
Q32. En EDGE, 8-PSK transporte :
A) 1 bit/symbole
B) 2 bits/symbole
C) 3 bits/symbole
D) 8 bits/symbole
Q33. La vitesse “max” par timeslot citée pour EDGE (MCS-9) est environ :
A) 9.6 kbps
B) 21 kbps
C) 59.2 kbps
D) 2 Mbps
Q34. UMTS/WCDMA utilise typiquement une largeur de canal de :
A) 200 kHz
B) 1.25 MHz
C) 5 MHz
D) 80 MHz
Q35. L’interface Uu en UMTS est entre :
A) NodeB et RNC
B) UE et NodeB
C) RNC et Core Network
D) SGSN et GGSN
1:B
2:D
3:C
4:B
5:C
6:A
7:B
8:B
9:C
10:B
11:C
12:B
13:A
14:B
15:C
16:C
17:C
18:C
19:B
20:B
21:B
22:A
23:B
24:D
25:B
26:B
27:B
28:D
29:B
30:A
31:B
32:C
33:C
34:C
35:B
Si tu veux, je peux aussi te faire une version “examen” (sans corrigé), puis un corrigé séparé sur un autre message, ou augmenter à 50–60 questions en couvrant davantage WDM/FTTx et les exercices chiffrés.
using the previous pdf send me a summary about the 2.5g section detailed don't removing anything important and explain briefly all the content of every page
Bien sûr ✅
Voici un résumé détaillé de la section 2.5G (GPRS) du PDF, en expliquant brièvement tout le contenu page par page, sans enlever les points importants. (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf)
📌 La section 2.5G dans ton PDF correspond principalement aux pages 174 → 196 (environ), et elle traite surtout de GPRS (puis après ça commence EDGE = 2.75G).
Cette page introduit pourquoi on a eu besoin de 2.5G : (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf)
Définition claire de GPRS : (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf)
Cette page explique l’idée de “superposition” réseau : (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf)
Cette page montre un schéma complet de l’architecture : (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf)
On remarque :
Explication du processus d’entrée d’un mobile dans le réseau paquet : (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf)
C’est l’étape clé : ouvrir la “session data” : (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf)
Après activation PDP : (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf)
Comparaison GSM vs GPRS : (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf)
Ici on introduit les mécanismes de contrôle : (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf)
On parle des nouveaux canaux pour gérer le data : (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf)
Cette page donne 3 exemples d’allocation des 8 timeslots GSM : (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf)
➡️ Ça montre que GPRS peut coexister avec la voix sur la même trame TDMA.
Explication comment un paquet IP devient transmissible sur GSM : (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf)
Suite des couches : (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf)
Explication du compromis : (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf)
Détails techniques : (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf)
Comparaison des 4 coding schemes : (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf)
Le réseau choisit CS-1..CS-4 dynamiquement : (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf)
Un seul timeslot = trop faible (9 à 21 kbps) (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf)
Solution :
Exemples donnés : (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf)
Réalité réseau :
Les critères de planification GPRS : (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf)
Délais élevés typiques : (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf)
Device density :
Scénario : (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf)
Questions :
Solution expliquée : (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf)
Latence :
Trade-off :
📌 GPRS (2.5G) a transformé GSM en ajoutant un cœur paquet (SGSN/GGSN), des PDCH partagés, des mécanismes Always-on + PDP Context, mais avec des débits faibles et une latence élevée.
Si tu veux, je peux aussi te faire :
✅ une fiche de révision 2.5G (ultra claire)
✅ ou un schéma résumé (architecture + attach + PDP context)
✅ ou encore 10 questions QCM uniquement sur GPRS avec correction.
using the previous pdf send me a summary about the 2.75g section detailed don't removing anything important and explain briefly all the content of the pages
Below is a detailed summary of the 2.75G section (EDGE) from your PDF, page by page, keeping all key points.
Page 199–200 (MS + BTS):
Page 201 (BSC + PCU):
Page 202 (Core Network):
Page 203 (higher data rates + new modulation):
Page 204 (MCS concept):
Page 205 (full MCS table):
Page 206 (backward compatibility + deployment simplicity):
Page 207 (services enabled):
Page 209 (coverage + capacity):
Page 210 (latency + device density):
Page 211 (QoS & scheduling):
Page 212 (exercise scenario):
Page 213 (questions):
Page 214 (solution part 1):
Page 215 (solution part 2):
If you want, I can also turn this into a one-page revision sheet (definitions + architecture + MCS table explained + planning takeaways + exercise formulas).
using the previous pdf send me a summary about the 3g section and onward ,detailed don't removing anything important and explain briefly all the content of every page ,at the end build a qcm about the 3g section and onward with the solution at the end of the qcm
Below is a detailed summary of the “3G section and onward” from your PDF (UMTS/WCDMA → WDM → FTTx + exercises), with a brief explanation of every page, and then a QCM + correction at the end.
Source: (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf)
This page concludes EDGE and explains why it was not enough:
The motivation for 3G:
Key points of the first real mobile internet generation:
3G introduces a more layered and flexible structure:
The “brain” of UTRAN (like BSC but more advanced):
3G core network mixes GSM legacy + packet services:
UMTS defines modular interfaces:
A diagram shows the complete end-to-end system:
A table of UMTS frequency bands + planning effect:
Key technical characteristics:
Exercise gives parameters:
R/W = 384000/5000000 = 0.0768
3.16 \times 0.0768 \approx 0.242
N = 200 / 0.242 \approx 826.45 \approx 827
So theoretical max ≈ **827 data users per cell** (simplified model). (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf) --- --- # ✅ WDM section (after 3G) — Page-by-page summary --- ## **Page 230 — What is WDM** WDM = Wavelength Division Multiplexing: - Multiple optical signals travel in the **same fiber** - Each uses a different **wavelength (color)** - Benefits: - increases fiber capacity without adding fiber - transports multiple services (Internet/voice/TV) simultaneously (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf) --- ## **Page 231 — CWDM vs DWDM** Two types: ### CWDM (Coarse WDM) - Wide spacing ≈ **20 nm** - Fewer channels **(8–18)** - Metro/short distance networks ### DWDM (Dense WDM) - Narrow spacing ≈ **0.8 nm or less** - Many channels (40/80/160/320+) - Each wavelength can be 10G/40G/100G/200G/400G… - Used for **backbone + long distance** (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf) --- ## **Page 232 — Dimensioning WDM: number of wavelengths** Steps: - Decide number of wavelengths based on traffic - Example: - 40 wavelengths × 10Gbps = **400Gbps capacity** - Each wavelength carries a given bit rate (2.5/10/40/100Gbps etc.) - Higher bit rates need better components + tighter spacing (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf) --- ## **Page 233 — Dimensioning WDM: optical budget + topology** - Compute optical losses: - attenuation, connectors, splices - Must ensure received power > sensitivity - Add margins for aging/upgrades - Choose topology: - ring / mesh / point-to-point - Dimensioning depends on number of nodes and amplifiers. (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf) --- --- # ✅ FTTx section — Page-by-page summary --- ## **Page 234 — Intro to FTTx** FTTx = Fiber to the x (home/building/curb/office…): - High bandwidth compared to copper - Supports HD video, cloud apps, online gaming - Future-proof - Closer fiber to user = higher speed + lower latency + better reliability (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf) --- ## **Page 235 — Types of FTTx** Defines: - **FTTH**: fiber to residence - **FTTB**: fiber to building then internal distribution - **FTTC**: fiber to cabinet then copper to home - **FTTO**: fiber to business - Also mentions **FTTN**: fiber to nodes (antenna). (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf) --- ## **Page 236 — (FTTx diagram page)** This page is mainly visual (architecture illustration of fiber reaching closer to users). (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf) --- ## **Page 237 — Dimensioning FTTx: bandwidth + subscribers** First steps of sizing: - Define target speed per user (100 Mbps / 1Gbps…) - Estimate number of subscribers - Example: 1000 homes in a neighborhood (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf) --- ## **Page 238 — Split ratio + feeder capacity** Passive Optical Networks (PON): - Uses splitters (no powered equipment) - Split ratios: **1:16, 1:32, 1:64** - Example: 1:32 means 1 feeder fiber serves 32 homes Feeder capacity calculation: - per-user bandwidth × users per splitter - Example: 100 Mbps × 32 = **3.2 Gbps** (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf) --- ## **Page 239 — Distance limit** Distance between: - **OLT** (central office) and **ONT** (user terminal) Usually max ≈ **20 km for GPON** Dimensioning must respect distance to avoid loss. (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf) --- ## **Page 240 — FTTx Network (diagram)** Mostly a network diagram showing OLT → splitters → ONT distribution. (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf) --- ## **Page 241 — Planning an FTTx network** Architecture options: - **PON**: shared fiber using splitters - **Point-to-Point**: dedicated fiber per user (costly but best performance) Equipment placement: - OLT: central office - Splitters: cabinets/distribution points - ONT: user side conversion optical → data (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf) --- ## **Page 242 — Reliability + scalability** Key planning points: - Distance limit again (≈20 km GPON) - Splitters add loss ⇒ check optical budget - Reliability: - backup fibers / redundant paths - maintenance access - Scalability: - plan growth (start 1:32, later 1:64) (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf) --- ## **Page 243 — Final exercise scenario (WDM + FTTx)** Scenario: - **DWDM ring** with: - 40 wavelengths - each 10Gbps - 4 nodes - total fiber 120 km - GPON neighborhood: - 960 homes - target 100 Mbps per user - split 1:32 - OLT–ONT must be ≤ 20 km (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf) --- ## **Page 244 — Exercise tasks** Part A (WDM): - A1 total backbone capacity - A2 amplifiers needed if max span = 80 km Part B (FTTx): - B1 ports needed for 960 homes with split 1:32 - B2 feeder capacity per splitter - B3 check if 18 km meets distance limit (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf) --- ## **Page 245 — Exercise solution Part A (WDM)** A1:C = 40 \times 10Gbps = 400Gbps
Nspans = 120/80 = 1.5 \Rightarrow 2\text{ spans}
So place **2 amplifiers** to keep each span ≤ 80 km (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf) --- ## **Page 246 — Exercise solution Part B (FTTx)** B1 OLT ports:960/32 = 30
100Mbps \times 32 = 3.2Gbps
18km \le 20km \Rightarrow \text{OK}
--- ## **Page 247 — Acronyms page** Quick glossary of extra acronyms: - DPI, TDF, SGW, PGW, UPF, eNB, gNB… (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf) --- --- # ✅ QCM (3G section and onward) + Correction ### **Q1.** The main reason EDGE pushed the need for 3G was: A) EDGE had no encryption B) EDGE had low bandwidth per user and couldn’t support multimedia well C) EDGE could not carry voice calls D) EDGE replaced Internet completely ### **Q2.** According to the course, 3G requirements were defined by: A) IEEE 802.11 B) ITU IMT-2000 C) ETSI GSM Phase 1 D) 3GPP Release 18 ### **Q3.** UMTS uses which access method? A) FDMA B) TDMA C) WCDMA D) OFDMA ### **Q4.** UMTS channel bandwidth is typically: A) 200 kHz B) 1.25 MHz C) 5 MHz D) 20 MHz ### **Q5.** The maximum data rate mentioned for UMTS is about: A) 200 kbps B) 2 Mbps C) 10 Mbps D) 100 Mbps ### **Q6.** In 3G architecture, UTRAN is composed of: A) BTS + BSC B) Node B + RNC C) eNB + EPC D) gNB + 5GC ### **Q7.** The interface between UE and Node B is: A) Iu B) Iub C) Uu D) S1 ### **Q8.** Node B connects to RNC using: A) Uu B) Iub C) Iu D) X2 ### **Q9.** RNC connects to the Core Network using: A) Iu B) Iub C) Uu D) S5 ### **Q10.** The 3G core element managing circuit-switched voice is: A) SGSN B) GGSN C) MSC/VLR D) RNC ### **Q11.** In UMTS, each user is separated mainly using: A) Time slots B) Spreading codes C) Fixed FDMA carriers D) Subcarriers ### **Q12.** 3G capacity is described as: A) Slot-limited capacity B) Interference-limited capacity (soft capacity) C) Fully unlimited capacity D) Only coverage-limited ### **Q13.** Why is power control critical in WCDMA? A) It increases SIM security B) It balances signals and maintains required Eb/N0 C) It replaces modulation D) It removes routing ### **Q14.** The baseline modulation in UMTS is: A) FM B) GMSK C) QPSK D) 64-QAM ### **Q15.** In the 3G exercise, the computed maximum number of users was about: A) 87 B) 200 C) 827 D) 5000 --- ## ✅ Correction (Solutions) 1:B 2:B 3:C 4:C 5:B 6:B 7:C 8:B 9:A 10:C 11:B 12:B 13:B 14:C 15:C --- If you want, I can also make you a **bigger exam-style QCM (30–40 questions)** only on **3G + WDM + FTTx**, with calculations included (Eb/N0, capacity WDM, split ratio, feeder sizing, etc.).using the previous pdf send me a summary about the 3g section and onward ,detailed don't removing anything important and explain briefly all the content exept content you think is not exam relevant, at the end build a qcm about the 3g section and onward with the solution at the end of the qcm
Below is a clean, exam-oriented, but still detailed summary of the 3G section and onward from your PDF, excluding content that is clearly not exam-relevant (pure illustrations, repeated diagrams, acronym-only slides, or obvious recap slides).
At the end, you’ll find a QCM (MCQ) with solutions focused on 3G + WDM + FTTx.
Source: IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf)
Exam takeaway:
👉 3G was required to deliver Mbps-level data, not achievable with GSM/EDGE.
Exam takeaway:
👉 3G = Wideband CDMA + 5 MHz + voice & data
Exam takeaway:
👉 GSM core reused, but new radio access (UTRAN) introduced.
👉 Modular design → easier evolution to LTE
Exam takeaway:
👉 3G capacity is soft capacity, not slot-limited.
Exam takeaway:
👉 Know formula meaning, not heavy math.
A) GSM lacked encryption
B) EDGE could not support MMS
C) Need for Mbps-level mobile data
D) GSM spectrum was unused
A) TDMA
B) FDMA
C) WCDMA
D) OFDMA
A) 200 kHz
B) 1.25 MHz
C) 5 MHz
D) 20 MHz
A) MSC
B) SGSN
C) RNC
D) GGSN
A) Iu
B) Iub
C) Uu
D) X2
A) Number of time slots
B) Fixed frequency reuse
C) Interference level
D) SIM card speed
A) Using copper cables
B) Larger wavelength spacing
C) Much denser wavelength spacing
D) Being wireless
A) Fiber length × attenuation
B) Wavelength spacing × power
C) Number of wavelengths × bit rate per wavelength
D) Number of nodes × amplifiers
A) FTTC
B) FTTB
C) FTTH
D) FTTN
A) 5 km
B) 10 km
C) 20 km
D) 80 km
If you want, I can next:
make me a exam ready summary for the whole pdf don't exclude important stuff , i already read it i just need to remember the important stuff
Here’s an exam-ready “memory refresh” summary for the whole PDF (Chapter 2: Mobile Generations + WDM/FTTx). I’m keeping all the important points you’re likely to be tested on, but in a compact revision style.
Cell types link to planning: macro/micro/pico relate to coverage + reuse decisions. (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf)
(Examples in the course: rural = macrocells, urban = microcells, indoor = pico/micro concepts appear through indoor solutions.) (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf) (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf)
Exercise model to remember (the one in the slides):
Using simplified relation : the provided scenario yields ≈ 827 users. (IR_Final_all_compressed-114-248.pdf)
If you want, I can also turn this into a one-page “formula + numbers” sheet (just the equations, typical values, and architecture blocks) so you can revise in 2 minutes before the exam.