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Ingolf Karls

Researcher at Intel

Publications -  53
Citations -  771

Ingolf Karls is an academic researcher from Intel. The author has contributed to research in topics: Transmission (telecommunications) & Wireless. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 53 publications receiving 700 citations. Previous affiliations of Ingolf Karls include Apple Inc. & Intel Mobile Communications.

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Patent

Methods and devices for radio communications

TL;DR: In this article, a preprocessing circuit is used to obtain context information related to a user location and a learning circuit is configured to determine a predicted user movement based on context information to obtain a predicted route and to determine predicted radio conditions along the predicted route.
Journal ArticleDOI

Millimeter-Wave Evolution for 5G Cellular Networks

TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed a comprehensive architecture of cellular networks with mmWave access, where mm-wave small cell basestations and a conventional macro basestation are connected to Centralized-RAN to effectively operate the system by enabling power efficient seamless handover as well as centralized resource control including dynamic cell structuring.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Quasi-deterministic approach to mmWave channel modeling in a non-stationary environment

TL;DR: A new quasi-deterministic (Q-D) approach is introduced for modeling mmWave channels that allows natural description of scenario-specific geometric properties, reflection attenuation and scattering, ray blockage and mobility effects.
Journal ArticleDOI

Quasi-deterministic millimeter-wave channel models in MiWEBA

TL;DR: This article introduces a quasi-deterministic channel model and a link level-focused channel model, developed with a focus on millimeter-wave outdoor access channels, and their specific area of application is investigated.
Patent

Application computation offloading for mobile edge computing

TL;DR: In this paper, a system, apparatuses, methods, and computer-readable media are provided for offloading computationally intensive tasks from one computer device to another computer device taking into account, inter alia, energy consumption and latency budgets for both computation and communication.