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1 Connecting The Internet of Everything Anne-Lise Thieblemont, Government Affairs

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1

Connecting The Internet of Everything

Anne-Lise Thieblemont, Government Affairs

Mobile changes everything

How we work

How we manage

our health

How we learn

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Energy Computing Retail

Education

Automotive Healthcare

Marketing

Consumer Electronics

Entertainment

ECOSYSTEMS EVOLVING TO MOBILE

© 2013 Qualcomm Technologies, Inc.

Qualcomm and Gobi are trademarks of Qualcomm Incorporated, registered in the United States and other countries. Other products and brand names may be trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective owners.

(GSMA Intelligence, Jul. ’13; UN, Dec. ’12)

(A.T. Kearney Analysis, Feb. ’13)

Scale of wireless continues to grow Cellular is the largest technology platform in history

~6.7 Billion Global cellular connections (~3.3 Billion unique subscribers)

~2.2 Billion 3G/4G continues rapid adoption

(~4.6 Billion connections expected by 2017)

>$1.5 Trillion Total mobile revenues in 2012

(~$2 Trillion by 2017, representing >2% of Global GDP)

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THE INTERNET OF EVERYTHING connected devices by 2020 25 BILLION

Source: Machina Research, ‘13

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Making spectrum available to everything Making them more aware, connected, intelligent, and interactive

Machines

Devices

Places

Objects

People

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Security, resilience, robustness vs. best effort

Quality of Service

wide area vs. short range; deep indoor vs. outdoor

Coverage

Nature of demand requires different radio links

High vs. low data rates; high vs. low density

Bandwidth

Uninterrupted vs. intermittent; real time vs. delayed; command/control vs. collection; cloud vs. network edge

Operation

Spectrum harmonisation, scalability and affordability in common

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Innovation in technology and spectrum access needed

Innovation

in

Technology

Innovation in

spectrum

access and

regulation

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Complementary approaches to access spectrum

SHARED EXCLUSIVE USE

When/where available & needed,

leverages existing mobile

infrastructure and standards,

optimal for small cells, controlled

QoS, low spectrum cost

Complementary Licensed Model— LSA Authorised Shared Access

SHARED USE

Best effort, non-

interference &

protection, best suited

for short ranges, no

spectrum cost

Unlicensed Approach Licensed - exempt

Licensed Approach Auctions of cleared spectrum

EXCLUSIVE USE

24/7, nationwide,

leverages existing mobile

infrastructure and

standards, controlled

QoS, high spectrum cost

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LSA enables timely release of harmonized quality

spectrum

Defense 27.2%

Aeronautical 17.1%

Maritime 3.6%

Other Public 1.4%

Public Safety 0.9%

Broadcasting 8.2%

Mobile 15.0%

Other Commercial

26.7%

Defense

Aeronautical

Maritime

Other Public

Public Safety

High volumes of underutilized quality spectrum

Available by frequency, geography and time

Can be accessible rapidly

Figure shows Spectrum Allocation by Sector within in a typical EU country 108 MHz – 6 GHz

Defense 27.2%

Aeronautical 17.1%

Maritime 3.6%

Other Public 1.4%

Public Safety 0.9%

Broadcasting 8.2%

Mobile 15.0%

Other Commercial

26.7%

Defense

Aeronautical

Maritime

Other Public

Public Safety

© 2013 Qualcomm Technologies, Inc.

Qualcomm and Gobi are trademarks of Qualcomm Incorporated, registered in the United States and other countries. Other products and brand names may be trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective owners.

(1) http://ukmobilecoverage.co.uk/best April 2013

(2) NIST, “Consolidated NIST Wireless Characteristics Matrix V5”, 10/25/2010

(3) Wireless Intelligence, Apr. ‘13; CIA, Jul. ‘13

(4) C; “Mobile Broadband Comparison”; March 2008

Smart Grid Scenario: why 3G/4G cellular Smart Grid benefits from cellular’ s pervasiveness and sustained investment

High reliability - Redundant network design with >99% availability(2)

Robust security - Built-in security features; used in government & finance sectors

Low cost of ownership - Large established ecosystem provides economy-of-scale

$

Ubiquitous coverage - Serving 98% UK population(1), fast time to

market on existing infrastructure

High performance - High throughput with average latency of milliseconds(4)

High scalability - Approx. 6.6 billion total connections worldwide(3)

Standard-based - Seamless interoperability; backed by global standards

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Connected Home Scenario

Auto Advance DO NOT DELETE

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Connected Home

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“Laundry is ready!”

“Laundry is ready!”

“Refrigerator door is

open”

“Coffee is

done!”

“Refrigerator door is open”

“Coffee is

done!”

Bringing Applications & Services to a New Level

NOW PLAYING: Artist: Wisteria Song: Go Lightly

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OPEN Connectivity framework

ECOSYSTEM Addresses many

vertical use cases

HORIZONTAL Interoperability

FLEXIBILITY Core services as

basic building blocks

AllJoyn is an open source project developed and distributed by Qualcomm Innovation Center, Inc. (QuIC), a subsidiary of Qualcomm Technologies Inc. (QTI).

The Broadest Cross-Industry Effort to Accelerate the Internet of Everything

PREMIER MEMBERS

COMMUNITY MEMBERS

AllSeen Alliance, Inc. 16

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For more information on Qualcomm, visit us at: www.qualcomm.com & www.qualcomm.com/blog

© 2013 Qualcomm Incorporated. All rights reserved. Qualcomm, Snapdragon, and Gobi are trademarks of Qualcomm Incorporated, registered in the United States and other countries. Vuforia and Wireless Reach are trademarks of Qualcomm Incorporated. Atheros and Skifta are trademarks of Qualcomm Atheros, Inc., registered in the united States and other countries. Hy-Fi is a trademark of Qualcomm Atheros, Inc. Alljoyn is a trademark of Qualcomm Innovation Center, Inc., registered in the United States and other countries. Other products and brand names may be trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective owners.

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Qualcomm Incorporated includes Qualcomm’s licensing business, QTL, and the vast majority of its patent portfolio. Qualcomm Technologies, Inc., a wholly-owned subsidiary of Qualcomm Incorporated, operates, along with its subsidiaries, substantially all of Qualcomm’s engineering, research and development functions, and substantially all of its product and services businesses, including its semiconductor business, QCT, and QWI. References to “Qualcomm” may mean Qualcomm Incorporated, or subsidiaries or business units within the Qualcomm corporate structure, as applicable.