Qualcomm working to deliver 5G iPhone 'as fast as we can'
Qualcomm President Cristiano Amon on Wednesday said the chipmaker is hard at work on a 5G modem solution for Apple's iPhone, the first major project in a renewed partnership the companies struck in April.

Amon provided commentary on Qualcomm's multi-year licensing agreement with Apple at the Snapdragon Tech Summit, saying an important first step will be the introduction of a 5G iPhone, reports PCMag.
"Priority number one of this relationship with Apple is how to launch their phone as fast as we can. That's the priority," Amon said.
To do so, Apple might not use Qualcomm's RF front end, a package of antennas, tuners and other circuitry that sits between network signals and a device's cellular modem. The advent of 5G has placed renewed emphasis on RF front end design, as the right mix of components can bolster access to the burgeoning wireless technology.
Amon suggests Apple was in the process of finalizing its 5G iPhone modem setup when the two companies settled a worldwide legal dispute in April. As such, Apple will likely rely on a Snapdragon modem with a front end assembled from components supplied by other manufacturers, at least for a 5G handset expected to debut in 2020.
"We have a multi-year agreement with [Apple.] It's not one, it's not two, it's multi-year for our Snapdragon modem. We're setting no expectations on front end, especially because we engaged it very late," Amon said. "We re-engaged probably later than both of us would like, and I think we've been working together to try to get as much as possible done, and take as much possible advantage of what they've done before so that we can actually launch a phone on schedule with 5G."
PCMag notes Apple will need to use Qualcomm parts if it intends to produce iPhone models compatible with mmWave 5G technology, as the chipmaker is the sole manufacturer of antennas that work with networks operated by Verizon and AT&T. That lines up with an analyst report on Tuesday which claims two of the four iPhones Apple plans to market next year will support mmWave 5G. All four models are thought to be compatible with the slower, but more robust sub-6GHz 5G spectrum.
Looking beyond 2020, Apple could transition to a complete Snapdragon solution, or what Qualcomm calls a "modem-RF system."
Apple is rumored to be working toward an in-house 5G modem that could be ready by 2022. The tech giant is anticipated to leverage assets purchased from previous modem partner Intel to complete the project, with an eye on integration in its A-series system-on-chip designs by 2023.

Amon provided commentary on Qualcomm's multi-year licensing agreement with Apple at the Snapdragon Tech Summit, saying an important first step will be the introduction of a 5G iPhone, reports PCMag.
"Priority number one of this relationship with Apple is how to launch their phone as fast as we can. That's the priority," Amon said.
To do so, Apple might not use Qualcomm's RF front end, a package of antennas, tuners and other circuitry that sits between network signals and a device's cellular modem. The advent of 5G has placed renewed emphasis on RF front end design, as the right mix of components can bolster access to the burgeoning wireless technology.
Amon suggests Apple was in the process of finalizing its 5G iPhone modem setup when the two companies settled a worldwide legal dispute in April. As such, Apple will likely rely on a Snapdragon modem with a front end assembled from components supplied by other manufacturers, at least for a 5G handset expected to debut in 2020.
"We have a multi-year agreement with [Apple.] It's not one, it's not two, it's multi-year for our Snapdragon modem. We're setting no expectations on front end, especially because we engaged it very late," Amon said. "We re-engaged probably later than both of us would like, and I think we've been working together to try to get as much as possible done, and take as much possible advantage of what they've done before so that we can actually launch a phone on schedule with 5G."
PCMag notes Apple will need to use Qualcomm parts if it intends to produce iPhone models compatible with mmWave 5G technology, as the chipmaker is the sole manufacturer of antennas that work with networks operated by Verizon and AT&T. That lines up with an analyst report on Tuesday which claims two of the four iPhones Apple plans to market next year will support mmWave 5G. All four models are thought to be compatible with the slower, but more robust sub-6GHz 5G spectrum.
Looking beyond 2020, Apple could transition to a complete Snapdragon solution, or what Qualcomm calls a "modem-RF system."
Apple is rumored to be working toward an in-house 5G modem that could be ready by 2022. The tech giant is anticipated to leverage assets purchased from previous modem partner Intel to complete the project, with an eye on integration in its A-series system-on-chip designs by 2023.
Comments
look at them crowing and they have not done a thing except extort.
Ownership and being a standard aren't mutually exclusive. USB is one of countless examples of proprietary tech that is also a standard.
Logical if we suppose that the next window of opportunity would be late 2021.
The actual 5G solution would not be the finely tuned solution that both parties would actually prefer but it would get the sticker on the box.
I think the reasons are understandable but I would also venture that the full QC 5G package that will be shipping on many Android phones in September 2020 will be more efficient.
This article points to another situation where Apple possibly already has its design in the pipe and, seeing as the modem itself is the most important element and time is pressing, it reads as if that is the priority: getting a 5G modem into an iPhone ASAP. The rest can wait.
From the outside, I don't think Apple engineering knew 'long before' the deal was announced that QC would be the modem they would be using.
Some years down the road we will know how things played out but right now I believe intel failed to deliver in the timeframes Apple had mapped out and with the efficiency Apple demanded. When that failed we had another 'Yikes!' moment (similar to a previous famous Yikes! moment with the Power Mac G3) and ended up with QC (and everything involved with that marriage).
If Apple had planned this plan B long before, I doubt this kind of article would have been needed.
Although I saw a rundown of the SD865 and it looks very good. Next year's 5G QC-Android phones will be very competitive and will make the wait to September 2020 (possible next iPhone launch) a hard slog for Apple.
Early 2020 will see some very important announcements for handsets and 5G will be right at the top of the feature lists of those handsets.
On-SoC modems are obviously where vendors want to be and, as you say, Huawei is already there but I think competition is looking great for next year. The Huawei Nova 6 5G has just been announced too (also using the Kirin 990-5G). More 5G phones and prices are already coming down and we're not in 2020 yet.
I think MWC2020 is going to be a great event and we will probably get a look at the next gen QC and Huawei 5G multi-mode modems.