A performance comparison of multi-hop wireless ad hoc network routing protocols
MobiCom '98 Proceedings of the 4th annual ACM/IEEE international conference on Mobile computing and networking
MIPMANET: mobile IP for mobile ad hoc networks
MobiHoc '00 Proceedings of the 1st ACM international symposium on Mobile ad hoc networking & computing
A context-aware middleware for applications in mobile Ad Hoc environments
MPAC '04 Proceedings of the 2nd workshop on Middleware for pervasive and ad-hoc computing
A comprehensive service discovery solution for mobile ad hoc networks
Mobile Networks and Applications
Proceedings of the 9th ACM international symposium on Modeling analysis and simulation of wireless and mobile systems
Design challenges for energy-constrained ad hoc wireless networks
IEEE Wireless Communications
A brief overview of ad hoc networks: challenges and directions
IEEE Communications Magazine - Part Anniversary
NonStop: continuous multimedia streaming in wireless ad hoc networks with node mobility
IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications
Credit-based slot allocation for multimedia mobile ad hoc networks
IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications
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Multimedia applications have been the key driving force in converging fixed, mobile and IP networks. Supporting Multimedia is a challenging task for wireless ad hoc network designers. Multimedia forms high data rate traffic with stringent QoS requirements. Wireless ad hoc networks are characterized by frequent topology changes, unreliable wireless channel, network congestion and resource contention. Providing scalable QoS is believed to be the most important challenge for multimedia delivery over ad hoc networks. In this paper, we introduce a provisioning and routing scheme for ad hoc networks which scales well while provisioning QoS. The proposed scheme is analysed using a mix of HTTP, voice and video streaming applications over 54Mbps 802.11g-based ad hoc networks. The scheme is simulated and compared to well-known routing protocols using the OPNET Modeller. The results show that our scheme scales well with increase in the network size, and outperforms well-known routing protocols.