QCA4012 supports three major Internet of Things

Recently, just recently successfully held the 2016 Taipei Computer Show, QUALCOMM officially launched a new generation of Internet of Things solution QCA4012 platform that supports dual-band 5GHz, built-in 1.5MB of memory, and includes a full-featured micro-control unit ), Can be run on 130MHz, also supports Apple HomeKit, Google Wave, AllJoyn three Internet protocol standards. QCA4012 technical parameters The QCA4012 is the QCA401x family of flagship products that uses a dual-band 2.4 / 5GHz solution. In the 2.4 GHz band used by smartphones, there are Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, ZigBee, and other proprietary technologies that consume bandwidth and introduce too much band interference at home. So Qualcomm thinks 5GHz is very important to reliable communication in the intellectual home. 5GHz is now being implemented on routers, smart TVs, set-top boxes, cell phones, cameras and more, which Qualcomm now wants to bring to smarter homes, such as lighting, detectors, thermometers and more . In addition to supporting 5GHz, Qualcomm also addresses other issues in the Internet of Things through the QCA401x family. For example, the QCA4012 includes a full-featured microcontroller (MCU) that runs at 130MHz, which means that it contains both a Wi-F module and a micro-control unit on a single-chip solution, This high degree of integration, which in turn can reduce costs, reduce chip size, to facilitate manufacturers to create all kinds of end products. In addition QCA4012 also built 1.5MB of memory, which means it can support Wi-Fi drives, equipped with AllJoyn software architecture, etc., but also leave a lot of space for developers and OEM manufacturers to facilitate them to build on the standard architecture Their own internet of things applications and products. And it also has a lot of room to play, supporting a wide variety of interfaces, including PWM, I2C, I2S, and so on, so it interoperates with a wide variety of sensors, drivers, displays, lighting and audio components , Making it smaller, making the cost of the entire IoT solution even lower. Also, the QCA4012 is also heavily engineered for security, with various levels of security features including root of trust, secure boot, hardware encryption, over-the-air (OTA) security software upgrades, Anti-rollback, one-time programmable (OTP) memory, and a built-in encryption engine for application-level security. Overall, QCA4012 security is very high, I believe it is sufficient to meet the needs of the Internet of Things. In a press briefing this morning, Rahul Patel also mentioned that Qualcomm is bringing all of our mobile technology integrations into the realm of home automation today. So we are currently doing more than just mobile phone chip, it is an integrated platform that contains a wide range of architecture, up to 1.5MB of memory support, rich interactive interface. Therefore, overall, we can achieve cost reduction and terminal size reduction. QCA4012 supports three major Internet of Things protocol standards Finally, the QCA4012 also has support for Apple HomeKit, Google Wave, and AllJoyn, and this is because Qualcomm believes the world of things needs an end-to-end solution, but the current Internet of Things market is more fragmented, Doing your own solution is like silos, and the communication between the terminal and the terminal can not communicate well because of these different IoT protocols. AllJoyn, developed by Qualcomm, is an open source protocol that supports end-to-end communication of near real-time. Currently QCA401x series is Apple HomeKit certified, also passed the Google Wave certification, of course, it also meets AllJoyn standards. The QCA401X supports these three major framework protocols and is believed to be strong enough to support end-to-end communications.