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© 2009 AT&T Intellectual Property. All rights reserved.
Cautionary Language Concerning Forward-Looking Statements
Information set forth in this presentation contains financial estimates and other forward-looking statements that are subject to risks and uncertainties, and actual results might differ materially. A discussion of factors that may affect future results is contained in AT&T’s filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. AT&T disclaims any obligation to update and revise statements contained in this presentation based on new information or otherwise.
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Safe Harbor Statement
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© 2009 AT&T Intellectual Property. All rights reserved. AT&T, AT&T logo and all other marks contained herein are trademarks of AT&T Intellectual Property and/or AT&T affiliated companies.
Sam HamoodMobility Application ConsultantAT&T [email protected]
Wireless Futures
An Unofficial Look at Trends & Possibilities and How They Apply To Government
Disclaimer: Material Within is Opinion of
Presenter and Should Not Be Construed
As a Commitment By AT&T
David PearceMobility Application ConsultantAT&T [email protected]
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© 2009 AT&T Intellectual Property. All rights reserved.
Agenda
How we got here….
Forces shaping wireless• End points• Network • Applications
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Disclaimer: Material Within is Opinion of
Presenter and Should Not Be Construed
As a Commitment By AT&T
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© 2009 AT&T Intellectual Property. All rights reserved.
Brief History of Enterprise Wireless Data Adoption
1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010
1985ARDIS
• IBM Field Service• City of LA Parking
1991Mobitex
1996Regional 2G
• CDPD
First Public Wireless Data NetworksEnabled Field Service Applications
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© 2009 AT&T Intellectual Property. All rights reserved.
Brief History of Enterprise Wireless Data Adoption
1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010
1985:ARDIS• IBM Field Service• City of Los Angeles
1993:Mobitex
1998BlackBerry 950 Pager
1996:Regional 2G
• CDPD
1999Palm VII
Birth of the Killer Apps - Wireless Email and Mobile Middleware for Field Service Applications
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© 2009 AT&T Intellectual Property. All rights reserved.
Brief History of Enterprise Wireless Data Adoption
1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010
1985:ARDIS• IBM Field Service• City of Los Angeles
2002National 2G Data
• GPRS• 1XRTT
1996:Regional 2G
• CDPD
Public Wireless IP-based Networks Enabled National Deployments of Enterprise Apps
1993:Mobitex
1998:BlackBerry 950 Pager
1999:Palm VII
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© 2009 AT&T Intellectual Property. All rights reserved.
Brief History of Enterprise Wireless Data Adoption
1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010
2004:National 2.5G
• EDGE
2003:First Integrated
BlackBerry
2004:Treo 600
First national high speed wirelessCompelling integrated form factors• Enabled broader adoption
1985:ARDIS• IBM Field Service• City of Los Angeles
1996:Regional 2G
• CDPD
1993:Mobitex
1998:BlackBerry 950 Pager
1999:Palm VII
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© 2009 AT&T Intellectual Property. All rights reserved.
Brief History of Enterprise Wireless Data Adoption
1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010
2004:National 2.5G
• EDGE
2003:First Integrated
BlackBerry
National & Global 3G NetworksNext Generation DevicesEasier Integration
1985:ARDIS• IBM Field Service• City of Los Angeles
1996:Regional 2G
• CDPD
1993:Mobitex
1998:BlackBerry 950 Pager
1999:Palm VII
2007-2008• 3G Speed
• Simultaneous Voice & Data• iPhone in Enterprise
• Ecosystem Development
2007-2008
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© 2009 AT&T Intellectual Property. All rights reserved.
Trends Shaping Cellular Wireless Today
End points
Network
Applications
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© 2009 AT&T Intellectual Property. All rights reserved. 10
The New Paradigm for the Web is Wireless
• Over 4 billion global mobile subscribers in 2008
• Nearly 3 times as many mobile subscribers as personal computer users in the world today
• Over 1.5 billion Internet users worldwide in 2008
• The next billion internet users will first access the web on a mobile device
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© 2009 AT&T Intellectual Property. All rights reserved.
End PointsExplosion of Devices With Extending Connectivity
Computers
Handheld devices
Residences and Commercial Buildings
Vehicle Telematics
Industrial automation
Shipping and Logistics
107
1011
108109
1010
1012
Consumer Products
M2M is a set of networking and IT technologies connecting the world’s physical systems.
Billions of endpoints await connection
through M2M
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© 2009 AT&T Intellectual Property. All rights reserved.
Trends – Profiling Advanced Devices
32 Gb memory
Voice Activated Applications
Video Capable
GPS Capable
Compass
Hardware Encryption
High Fidelity Wide Screen
Applications
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© 2009 AT&T Intellectual Property. All rights reserved.
Device Evolution
Legacy Mobile Devices
• Slow processing speeds• Low resolution screens• Small memory capacity• Large/bulky batteries• Limited Input/Output
Today’s Mobile Devices
• Faster processors• High res screens• Huge memory capacity• Slim compact batteries• Flexible Input/Output
• Touch• Voice• Projection
The Lines Are Blurring
All Computing devices will Communicate
while …
All Communications devices will Compute!
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© 2009 AT&T Intellectual Property. All rights reserved.
Future Capabilities of Devices?
Micro hard disks
Biometrics
Thermal and Radio Frequency fingerprint scanning
Voice Print
Facial Recognition
Retinal and IRIS Scanning
RFID Authentication
Multi-modality
Voice interface
Bluetooth & W-USB
(Wireless USB)
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© 2009 AT&T Intellectual Property. All rights reserved. 15
Device Futures
Wearable displays• Display that paints an image
directly on the eye or onto a pair of glasses
• Creates a large translucent display that appears at arm’s length from the user
• First consumer product (under $300) just released by myvu. Professional grade products remain in the $2000+ range
• Some have integrated headset and microphone, an enabler for the best possible multimodal experience
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© 2009 AT&T Intellectual Property. All rights reserved.
Network Trends – Consolidation Around 3GPP Standard
25 – 40 KbpsDown
70 – 135 KbpsDown
700 – 1.7MbpsDown Announced
400 – 700KbpsDown
220 - 320KbpsDown
GPRSPeak: 48 Kbps
EDGEPeak: 237 Kbps
UMTSPeak: 384 Kbps
HSDPAPeak: 1.8 Mbps
HSPA 3.6Peak: 3.6 Mbps
HSPA 7.2Peak: 7.2 Mbps
HSPA 14.4Peak: 14.4 Mbps
HSPA+Peak: 21 MbpsNo MIMO
LTE Phase 1Peak: 50 MbpsMIMO (2x2)
LTE Phase 2Peak: 80 MbpsMIMO
Currently Deployed in Nearly 350 Major Metro Areas
100 Mbps
50 Mbps
40 Mbps
30 Mbps
20 Mbps
10 Mbps
5 Mbps
1 Mbps
GPRS EDGE UMTS HSDPA HSPA HSPA 7.2 HSPA 14.4 HSPA+ LTE
Past Present Future
AT&T Typical Download Throughput
AT&T has recently announced the deployment of 7.2 for fall of 2009
AT&T has recently announced the deployment of LTE
Trial: 2010Commercial launch: 2011
NetworkTechnology
Future network speeds and plans are subject to change
Announced
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HSPA 3G Standard & LTE 4G Upcoming Std
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© 2009 AT&T Intellectual Property. All rights reserved.
GPRS48K
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Time 2G
EDGE237K
The Technology PathWith GSM, devices will be backward compatible as technology evolves
3G
4G
Today
UMTS384K
HSDPA1.8M
HSPA7.2M
(planned for fall 2009-11)
HSPA3.6M
Based on theoretical peak speeds. Actual speed experienced will be less.
2G and 3G not available everywhere.
LTE20-50M
(planned for2011-12)
FutureDeployment
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© 2009 AT&T Intellectual Property. All rights reserved.
Mobility is about sharing and driving “real time” information to the edge of the enterprise - front line workers reaping the benefits of mobility.
Wireless Applications Support Processes At the Edge
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© 2009 AT&T Intellectual Property. All rights reserved.
Applications Will Redefine How We WorkAT&T Mobile Applications
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Vehicle Location/Fleet
Executive Dashboards
Machine-to-Machine
Field ServiceAutomation
• Location Aware Services• Real time Transactions in the field
• Meta Searches• Imaging and Video
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© 2009 AT&T Intellectual Property. All rights reserved.
Government Intersection Point : Field Force & Fleet Mobilization
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© 2009 AT&T Intellectual Property. All rights reserved.
Field Workers Mobilization Impact
– Reduction of unnecessary driving: 25 miles saved per worker per day, in 100 workers creates savings of $300,000 in a year
– Increase of productivity: Increasing only 15% on the productivity of 100 field workers that today take 4 jobs/cases per day allows the team to work on 13,000 additional jobs/cases per year.
– Reduction of overtime: 100 field workers @ $25/overtime hour, 1 overtime hour saved per day represents $550,000 saved in a year
– Paper elimination: Single paper form can cost an organization $30-$165 to use, process, file and retrieve*. Eliminating 100 forms a day, even at $10 per form per year, represents $250,000 per year in savings
*Source: Gartner Group
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Driving Analysis and Training• Idling Reductions
• Speeding
• Sharp Acceleration and Harsh Braking
• Over-revving
Vehicle Compliance, Maintenance, Remote Smog Checks• Monitor trouble codes, emissions control system, reduce wear and tear
Going Green: CO2 Reductions and Offsets
Fleet Utilization and Emergency Response• Maximize # of trips/vehicle and services/trip; minimize cost/trip
• Method: analyze and re-sequence routes, re-assign deliveries, reduce vehicles or miles
Personnel Management, Productivity, Paperwork
Insurance Cost Savings
Costs: You Can Only Manage What You Measure
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Sustainability Initiatives & SmartGrid
Electric
Gas
Water
All Resources
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© 2009 AT&T Intellectual Property. All rights reserved.
Public Safety Examples
Gunshot Detection & Dispatch
Decoy Vehicle Rigged With Video Surveillance Equipment & Cellular Uplink
Multi-Agency GPS Tracking Solutions
Cellular Enabled Ankle Bracelet with GPS
Sophisticated Alerting
& Disaster Recovery Tools
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© 2009 AT&T Intellectual Property. All rights reserved.
Wireless Today & Tomorrow
Remote Patient
Monitoring
Wireless Video Surveillance Solar Monitoring
Remote Machine Diagnostics
Container Monitoring
Today’s Depoyments
• Driven by cost reduction
• Very low data usage
• Wireless is a complement
Tomorrow’s Wireless Deployment• Broad functional use
• Wireless is integral part of solution
• Multi-country, evolving to global
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Digital Signage
ParkingCallboxes
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Additional Governmental Application Areas
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© 2009 AT&T Intellectual Property. All rights reserved. Page 28
Look Around - Where Will You Apply Mobility?
(c) 2008 AT&T Intellectual Property. All rights reserved. AT&T and the AT&T logo are trademarks of AT&T Intellectual Property.