Hi everybody. I'm Sean Setter, Director of Solution Engineering here at T-Mobile. Want to take a minute. Thank everybody for joining me. I know you have busy schedules, but we wanted to review some exciting information around our one of our new offerings, T Priority. So you may have seen some other news about T Priority out there or maybe even reviewed one of our other webinars recently, but TEA Priority is a new offering from T-Mobile that's out to really enhance the the usability for our first responder community out there. So many of you know T-Mobile has the largest and fastest 5G network in the country, but still there can be challenges for our first responders that are out there. I think we all can agree we want them to have the best network in emergency situations. So what we've done is we we've created T Priority, which is basically the world's first ever network slice for our first responders to give them the priority and great experience they have when they're doing critical operations today. What we're going to talk about is really the difference real quick overview of why T priority is important, but we're going to spend most of the time on use cases. Why would we want to use T priority out there and where could it really come in handy as we're leveraging our 5G network? So real quick, some of the advantages our first responders will have out there is they're going to get more capacity. So by slicing off a portion of our 5G network, we're able to give flexibility to assume and ensure that all our first responders are going to get the best connection out there possible for when they're out there in the field. While they're on there, they're going to get 40% more capacity then traditional user would see with our competition. So we all know all the carriers are out there have a first responder type of offering. We're going to give more capacity to our first responder community than those do. We're also making faster speeds when you're on T priority slice, whether in congestion or not, you're going to get about two times faster speed on average then what first responders are used to out in the field as well. And then better coverage. So no one has better 5G coverage for us than us at T-Mobile. We now cover over 98% of the country with 5G network. And what that allows is people not only in urban areas, which traditionally get the 1st and the best and the fastest speeds, but also in rural communities and a lot of the, you know, situations that come up or not in big cities or all over the country. So being that I have reliable 5G coverage in areas that are small towns and communities across the country really will give up an advantage when we talk about the priority and how that we give our first responders that reliable data. This is a good way to think about it. So we have a a certain finite amount of data capacity that's out there on the towers and in everyday normal conditions that that traffic is divvied up amongst all, all the consumers that are using it. Could be business customers, could be consumers, it could be kids watching YouTube videos on their phone. And it's also a first responder community. And typically it's not an issue, right? Everybody has enough capacity of a great experience on our network. But if there is an event, say a maybe it's a major sporting event or like a large football game or something, or maybe it's New Year's Eve and everybody's crashing into one area, the network gets constrained. It can only hold so many connections. So what T priority allows is those individuals that are on T priority or first responder community are able to get not only on the network, but priority and preemption, which has been discussed in some other calls to get on the network. So capacity is great. You really got to get on there to start out. So what we do is we allow to our first responders to get on the network. If there's no room, we give them room and then we give them a ton of space on the network, making sure they're able to handle the tasks that are at hand. So one other thing that worth mentioning is our Connected Heroes program. Many of our first responders are on our Connected Heroes program and that's great and it's not going anywhere. You don't have to leave the Connected Heroes program if you don't want to. However, T priority is another option for those agencies that are on connected heroes. It does give certain advantages over a connected heroes program, like up to 10 times more capacity than AT&T. First, that is a great example, right? It also double S the down lake, the download threshold. So you're guaranteed a certain amount of threshold on the downlink that you have with other carriers or other offerings. So just wanted to call out that if you're on connected heroes, you can stay, but this is also a great opportunity to move over priority. So when it comes to agencies going further, we talk about some of the great offerings that are out there, but another call out is it's end to end support, right? We're going to give you the seamless connectivity, but that connectivity really has to go to solving the problem, right? We want to deliver a product that helps you in the field solve solutions. So whether that's making sure your, your officers have the best, fastest connection out there to do their jobs well, improve video capabilities, we're also going to give you a, you know, a solid readout of what you're trying to accomplish and making sure we deliver the solution that meets that. And then also there's going to be back end support. So we want to help you everywhere from onboarding to get started and then give you support afterwards in day 2. We don't want to sign you up and then move on to the next. We're going to give you support as it goes through. So again an important call out that a support and the service is only as good as the end in support that carrier does delivers. So this is an example of one of the use cases we have out there for T priority why you wouldn't want to use it. So this is a train derailment as an act as a as an example where you see the three call outs we had earlier with priority to speeds and capacity. Imagine there's a trail derailment, you've got all kinds of first responders showing up. First thing to call out is interoperability capabilities. We do have that at T-Mobile where we do do enable have the capability of doing interoperability between these agencies. We offer more capacity. So let's just say you have 141st responders show up. If the typical, typical capacity is 100, we're now upping that capacity to 140. So we're able to fit more first responders on the network is capacity than we did before. You're going to get faster speeds and lower latency. So if we're doing things like video calls back from a site, going to the command center, you're going to get faster results and clear picture. And then again, priority, right. You might have onlookers that are coming, you might have other users, maybe people that are on the train trying to call. We want to enable those those consumers to be able to make the calls as well. But we need to give more access and priority and we have the bandwidth over all the priority to make sure everybody has has a good amount of capacity to deliver what they need. But most of all are first responders just calling out a couple of use cases you might not think of. Obviously, law enforcement, local law enforcement's a big one. They're showing up to things like events like I described earlier, or maybe there's an incident response. Those could be routers in the back, a trunk mount in the back of a patrol car that's out there. It could be in a command center. Several times when there's an emergency out there, there will be at a command center that's set up in a trailer or a bus. And we can enable those types of environments quickly with T priority to set up not only contact for our users on T-Mobile, but perhaps a Wi-Fi hotspot in an area for first responders to gather. So that's a big advantage. Private EMS or even any EMS, you got an ambulance that's leaving a scene, it could be they're giving Ekgs or some kind of of a readout of video that's going to the hospital ahead of time. So by the time the patient gets to the hospital, there's already a readout of what's going on and the doctors can be ready to go in the emergency response area so they can see the imaging coming through or the EKG type results coming through before they get there. That's a big one. Hospitals, obviously an emergency hospitals, the the emergency rooms can be filled. There could be tons of people coming in one time. Obviously we've had many disasters in the past few weeks unfortunately. And when they do, all these hospitals get crushed with a ton of people coming in and resources for not only doctors making phone calls, but having data sessions or IoT from, or maybe it's a tablet reading patient data or going out to ambulatory. All those things are being able to be prioritized over other types of capacity that might be going through the network. And then the other one that's not really talked about a lot is utilities. Obviously if we lose water or we lose electricity or we use gas or some of of this critical infrastructure that comes across our country, it can be really impacting to not only communities that are out there, but you know, the first responders being able to do their jobs. If we lose water or or gas or there's a gas emergency, we need to have the fast response in many areas, again, that may be rural that can come through and they're able to handle power outages, infrastructure question, making sure we're monitoring these things before they actually have an issue like a gas leak or a water leak. So these are some of the critical components that help bring T priority into the mainstream and make sure we're getting the the best experience possible for our first responder community. So with that, that's the end of the presentation. But if you'd like more information, I'd encourage you to go and fill out the content form below or go visit ourt-mobile.com back slash T priority website. Thanks and have a great day. _1739897318716