Cross-Sender Bit-Mixing Coding
Scheduling to avoid packet collisions is a long-standing challenge in networking, and has become even trickier in wireless networks with multiple senders and multiple receivers. In fact, researchers have proved that even {\em perfect} scheduling can only achieve . Here is the number of nodes in the network, and is the {\em medium utilization rate}. Ideally, one would hope to achieve , while avoiding all the complexities in scheduling. To this end, this paper proposes {\em cross-sender bit-mixing coding} ({\em BMC}), which does not rely on scheduling. Instead, users transmit simultaneously on suitably-chosen slots, and the amount of overlap in different user's slots is controlled via coding. We prove that in all possible network topologies, using BMC enables us to achieve . We also prove that the space and time complexities of BMC encoding/decoding are all low-order polynomials.
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