A radio link management system for a home or office substantially (i) an
ad hoc network of agents wirelessly communicating among themselves, while
(iii) clients wirelessly communicate with proximate agents. Control of
the network may be centralized as network controller integrated with an
agent, or may be distributed upon the network of agents. Some agent or
agents, which may include an agent that is also the network controller,
typically serves as a gateway device which connects to a worldwide
communications network external to the home or office, normally by fiber
or by wire.Each agent is most commonly a small radio transceiver plus
logic and power supply that mounts upon a wall and plugs directly into an
AC power socket. Agents wirelessly communicate among themselves and with
the controller--which may be centralized or distributed--in a
bandwidth-efficient mode since prime power is not an issue. Each client,
which is most commonly a battery-powered user device, wirelessly radio
communicates with one or more proximately-located agents. Consistent with
overall demand for the radio resource, parameters for radio communication
are allocated ad hoc in a manner which is (a) client-dependent, and which
(b) uses the least power from the battery-powered client. The agents
establish an ad-hoc network among themselves, with routing among and
between the agents being both multi-hop and "minimum hop" to conserve
bandwidth. Accordingly both power and bandwidth are conserved, each as
and where required and desired.