 We're here at ITU Telecom World 2014 in Doha in the state of Qatar and I'm very pleased to be joined by John Davis who is Vice President and General Manager of the World Ahead Programme for the Intel Corporation. John, great to see you again. It's great to be back at Telecom World Max. Now I'd like to start by talking about the central theme here at ITU Telecom World 2014 is future in focus. What key developments in technology, policy or business do you see as key to the near future? I think the way to look at this is on the internet there's 3 billion people that have access and use it regularly and benefit from it. That means in the world there's 4 billion that don't. So if you look at technology it needs to be easier for the 4 billion to use so they'll want to adopt it. It needs to bring the benefits. It needs to be affordable and just very simple, easy devices. That's technology. Policy needs to be there to enable the people, many of which can't afford to have access to it somehow, whether it's shared, whether it's from universal service, whether it's from subsidies or some kind of help and the focus has to be to do that. And what role do partnerships have very much in this disruptive age? Well, partnerships is everything in our industry. A big theme at this conference is internet of things. So an example, Intel builds technology for the things, the chips that go in those. We build technology for the networks, we build it for the client devices, the PCs, the tablets, we build it for the data centers and all the pieces that enable it. If you want to put that in a building say and manage the energy, you might work with Cisco on their energy management program or you may work with Telecom to move the data or a big systems integrator that makes it all work together or multiple ones that make it work across multiple buildings in a city. So it's a very integrated partnership and no one company alone can do this. And what are Intel's priorities in the near future? Well Intel is an enabling company. We build the building blocks of the internet and we want to reach them to everyone on the planet. So we look at building blocks like the internet of things to drive that. Client devices are very important to us. So refreshing the PCs, is it a PC, is it a tablet? There are two in ones, thinner, lighter, great user interface, touch, gesture, voice to enable these. We work in the data centers. The client device, the service that's sitting in the data centers. How do you manage them? How do they be lower power? How do you analyze the data? How do you use it for making decisions in your business or in your lives? And so all of those pieces as enabling building blocks and the interoperability of them is really where we spend our time and effort. And what's the main value for Intel of events such as ITU Telecom World 2014? Well, at Telecom World, you'll find many ministers come here. Vice ministers, permanent secretaries, decision makers for their countries. And so we get a chance to meet with them, talk with them about their plans, share best practices, good practices from other countries. And very often there will be decisions made here that in their countries maybe need a workshop on this area, we want to look at this education, this healthcare program, many different areas of technology. And those decisions can get made here and follow up can be done in the country. Fantastic. Now, what's your main message to participants and delegates here at ITU Telecom World? Well, people come in as leaders. These are ministers. These are leaders of industries, captains of industries. And adjust to lead. And we're trying to reach more people. We're trying to bring more value. And this isn't always easy. Leadership is difficult. And really it's about leading, making a difference. The theme of the future of this event. And go out there and do that and be bold in doing it. And finally, a question that I've been asking everyone who's been coming into the studio. What single technological development do you think will have the biggest impact in the next five to ten years? Well, I think it will be the second phase of mobile data. There's three billion people in the world as consumers. They love it. As businesses it benefits their business. But there's four billion that don't. And when you think about how they can use technology. Even when they're unbanked, I can use a mobile for my first payments and banking. That changes their lives. I can use a laptop for being educated even from a distance. That changes their education and their future. I can use this for managing my health care. That changes the quality of their life. I can use it as a farmer for knowing what fertilizers to use, testing my soils, reaching my customers. I can make more money. And so I think it's the mobile data and the impact it's going to have on the people's lives that don't have it. And there will be a bigger impact on those lives than the people that do have it. It will change. It will be the greatest equalizer in the next few years. John Davis, thank you very much for being with us today. Great. Thank you so much.