US Patent Application 18042782. WIRELESS COMMUNICATION APPARATUS AND METHOD simplified abstract
Contents
WIRELESS COMMUNICATION APPARATUS AND METHOD
Organization Name
Inventor(s)
Hiromasa Uchiyama of Tokyo (JP)
WIRELESS COMMUNICATION APPARATUS AND METHOD - A simplified explanation of the abstract
This abstract first appeared for US patent application 18042782 titled 'WIRELESS COMMUNICATION APPARATUS AND METHOD
Simplified Explanation
The abstract describes a wireless communication apparatus that utilizes two different links for communication and controls the allocation, transmission, and reception of data.
- The apparatus performs communication using a first link and a second link.
- It controls the allocation of transmission data to the first and second links.
- It controls the transmission of the first data using the first link and the transmission of the second data using the second link.
- It controls the reception using the first link for a first response that includes reception success/failure information for the first data and at least a part of the second data.
- It controls the reception using the second link for a second response that includes reception success/failure information for the second data and at least a part of the first data.
- The technique can be applied to wireless communication systems.
Original Abstract Submitted
A wireless communication apparatus: performs communication using a first link; performs communication using a second link; and performs allocation control of allocating transmission data to first data and second data, transmission control of controlling transmission of the first data using the first link and transmission of the second data using the second link, and reception control of controlling reception using the first link of a first response including reception success/failure information indicating a success/failure of reception with respect to the first data and at least a part of the second data and reception using the second link of a second response including the reception success/failure information indicating a success/failure of reception with respect to the second data and at least a part of the first data. The present technique can be applied to wireless communication systems.