Light Reading Podcasts

Light Reading
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Sep 21, 2021 • 12min

Cisco siphons $20M into Rural Broadband Innovation Center

The goal of the Cisco Rural Broadband Innovation Center is to provide service providers of any size with access to testing the same level of technologies that support broadband access, says Robin Olds, a business development manager for Cisco's Americas Service Provider group, who joined in on the Light Reading podcast with Zeus Kerravala, founder and principal analyst of ZK Research. The $20 million Center was launched in mid-June under the umbrella of Cisco's Country Digital Acceleration program and will focus on delivering high-speed Internet access to rural areas to lessen the digital divide.  Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Sep 20, 2021 • 3min

Light Reading Recap: Week ending Sept. 17

Last week's telecom news highlights included a look at the wild valuation ride of social media and messaging platform Discord as it recently rejected a $12 billion takeover bid and then a $500 million funding round. We also review the latest info on 3G network shutdown dates for the big US carriers. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Sep 16, 2021 • 27min

The Divide: How Uprise Fiber seeks to solve what you hate about your ISP

In this episode, we hear from Sam Sanders, founder CEO of Uprise Fiber. Uprise was launched two years ago on the West Coast by a group of telecom industry vets eager to use their expertise to provide communities with a new, better, and more affordable Internet option. We discuss how Uprise addresses typical problems people have with their ISPs, as well as the company's model of partnering with developers and leveraging existing fiber, and how Uprise seeks to build digital equity into broadband deployments. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Sep 16, 2021 • 23min

Windstream: SD-WAN stalled, not squashed by pandemic

Windstream CMO Mike Flannery joins the podcast to discuss why enterprises didn't deploy SD-WAN as widely as the industry anticipated they would at the start of the pandemic. Flannery explains how concerns around cost and ease of use stalled SD-WAN deployments for remote workers, but the tide is changing as remote access tools improve and enterprises budget for a long-term distributed workforce. "Organizations still had quite a bit of their overhead tied up in physical locations and networking services," explains Flannery. "Investment in a home-based SD-WAN would have been a materially additive cost at a time when business revenues were under pressure as a result of the pandemic."In addition, Flannery shares insights on whether customers are on board with and fully comprehend SASE, the networking and security convergence trend recently coined by Gartner. He also explains which industries have been more bullish about readily adopting SASE and SD-WAN. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Sep 15, 2021 • 25min

The Leading Lights finalists: Part I

Light Reading's editors are in the middle of judging the 2021 Leading Lights Awards and this is the first in a three-part podcast series discussing the Leading Lights finalists. On this podcast, Light Reading's Phil Harvey, Kelsey Ziser and Mike Dano discuss trends they're seeing, what's happening in the awards categories that they're judging and what they've learned from the contest entries as they dig in and prepare to announce this year's winners.The categories covered in this podcast include:Best New Open RAN ProductMost Innovative Hybrid Networking StrategyMost Innovative SD-WAN Product/Service EvolutionOutstanding Use Case: Service Provider Security (can include SD-WAN)Best New 5G Core ProductMost Innovative 4G/5G Business ServiceMost Innovative 4G/5G Consumer ServiceOutstanding Use Case: Edge ComputingBest New Optical Networking/IP ProductCompany of the Year (Private)The Light Reading Hall of FameOutstanding Optical/IP Networking Components Vendor Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Sep 14, 2021 • 30min

Matrixx CTO: How modern charging, billing unlocks new mobile services

Marc Price, CTO of Matrixx Software, joins the podcast to explain how operators can rethink traditional mobile pricing models for 5G services. Price recently spoke at Light Reading's BIG 5G Event to discuss new monetization opportunities and the benefits of an open cloud-native network core for 5G.Price explains how Matrixx is supporting Visible, the MVNO run by Verizon, and why that approach fits a growing market that wants customer service on completely different terms. "It's much more like the Amazon experience. As customers procure a service or want a new feature … it's all done directly through the phone and the service," Price said.Price also recounts Matrixx's work with Australian service provider Telstra on digital billing services. "Telstra uses Matrixx for the lion share of [Australian] customers, and because of the real-time experience, they realize that there's no reason to separate pre-paid and post-paid customers," said Price. This shift has improved the customer experience, reduced the number of calls to customer service and thereby saved Telstra money, he said. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Sep 14, 2021 • 25min

Big 5G Recap: Going hybrid in the mile-high city

Light Reading's Jeff Baumgartner and Mike Dano join Phil Harvey to recap the Big 5G Event and discuss what has happened lately with in-person events, what seems to be working well as folks start traveling more and how things could be just a little bit better in these "new normal" times. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Sep 14, 2021 • 6min

How 'as a service' might supercharge private 5G

The private wireless networking trend has been a hot-button issue in the global wireless industry for months now. The notion, after all, is tantalizing: What if software and equipment vendors could sell their networking wares to enterprises, utilities, ports and other such customers in addition to wireless network operators? Already, some vendors believe the space is showing signs of maturity. "Private 5G is really taking off," said Todd Krautkremer, CMO of private networking equipment vendor Cradlepoint. Ericsson acquired the company last year in a $1.1 billion deal. Krautkremer explained that the sector is growing in part because of the new business models available to potential customers, specifically the "as a service" model. It allows schools, government agencies and other private 5G networking customers to pay for their networking needs under an "as you need it," Netflix-style model, rather than buying the network outright as one might a DVD. "People want the value of private 5G but they don't want to build a mini carrier network," Krautkremer explained. "They want it to act a lot like Wi-Fi does in the enterprise." Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Sep 14, 2021 • 12min

Verizon's Peselli on enterprises' evolving network consumption model

Massimo Peselli, SVP of Global Enterprise for Verizon Business, provides insight into how the pandemic has changed the way "enterprises consume the network." "Over the last 18 months we developed this concept of network-as-a-service, which is our response to cloudification of the application," says Peselli. "It's basically a concept where customers are consuming the network on a consumption-based model." Peselli explains how customers can utilize Verizon's cloud to reduce the hardware needed to support their network operations, and how 5G is advancing the network-as-a-service approach. This interview was recorded at the Big 5G Event in Denver. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Sep 13, 2021 • 7min

Private 5G represents 'turning point' for John Deere

 John Deere's Kiel Ronning provides some fresh insight into how 5G-powered private networks are weaving their way into smart manufacturing, enabling the company to take advantage of low latencies, speed and other important performance metrics that make factories run more efficiently and flexibly. Ronning also considers how private networks will play into John Deere's short- and long-term plans and how the company can integrate IoT devices into private network environments. "We think this is a key turning point for us to ... introduce cellular connectivity in our factories so that we can take advantage of the low-latency, high-bandwidth and QoS components that come with that," he says. This interview was recorded during the Big 5G Event in Denver. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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