Light Reading Podcasts

Light Reading
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Apr 23, 2021 • 23min

MyBundle.TV coaches viewers on cutting the pay-TV cord

Jason Cohen, CEO and co-founder of MyBundle.TV, joins the Light Reading podcast to discuss how his company connects viewers to streaming services, and assists broadband and cable providers in identifying new customers.In addition, Cohen examines drivers behind the cord-cutting trend, and shares why many viewers are still holding out with traditional pay-TV services."One of the big misnomers is that everyone has cut the cord. There are still about 70 million households with traditional TV, and that's too many in our opinion. A big chunk of those don't know that there is YouTubeTV, Hulu, Sling…etc. We believe that with a helping hand, there are a lot of people who can make that transition to streaming that still want the traditional live TV content."Cohen provides insight into the channels and streaming services that are most popular among viewers – plus, some surprising results. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Apr 22, 2021 • 23min

Verizon's Anand Shah on why private networks are a big opportunity

Anand Shah, Verizon's director of technology strategy and architecture, joins the podcast to talk all about private networks. We cover the wide variety of use cases for private networks, the enterprises and industries that present the most challenging private network deployments; and we talk briefly about security considerations and edge computing advancements involved as well.Shah also reminds us that managed services is a huge opportunity that surrounds private networks, even in those cases where 5G is not the most urgent need. For many businesses, in fact, connectivity, networking and IT itself can all be delivered as a service. "I mean, you don't need an IT department now to manage these private networks, we got it for you," Shah said. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Apr 22, 2021 • 19min

The Divide: ConnectMaine's Peggy Schaffer on the 'street-by-street battle' for broadband

On this episode, we hear from Peggy Schaffer, executive director for the ConnectMaine Authority.ConnectMaine was established in 2006. Since then, Shaffer says it has spent approximately $12 million in grant funding to expand broadband services to people.She and I discuss the state of broadband in the state of Maine and what her office has been able to accomplish; as well as what she hopes to see from federal broadband legislation and why she believes we need to stop giving money to the FCC. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Apr 15, 2021 • 20min

The Divide: David Gilford on local priorities for federal broadband funds

On this episode, we hear from David Gilford, principal at HR&A Advisors and co-founder of the Broadband Equity Partnership: a consultancy focused on ending the digital divide in the US.In partnership with the Benton Institute for Broadband and Society, the Broadband Equity Partnership recently issued a survey to 120 government and nonprofit broadband leaders across the country to assess local priorities for the federal government's broadband stimulus.David joins the podcast to discuss the results of that research and the key takeaways for Congress as lawmakers negotiate legislation around President Biden's $100 billion broadband plan. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Apr 9, 2021 • 22min

Sponsored podcast: How Plume's WorkPass can bring smart connectivity to SMBs

On this sponsored edition of the Light Reading podcast, we chat with Tyson Marian, Plume's chief commercial officer, about the company's new product, WorkPass. We'll cover what WorkPass is and why Plume is building services for small businesses. As part of that discussion, we'll discuss how Plume uses its experience in managing smart homes – especially its cloud and AI expertise – to help small businesses deal with their most challenging network issues.As ever, with Plume, it's not just about the end user. The company's biggest customers are some of the world's largest service providers, so we'll discuss how those CSPs will use WorkPass to complement their existing offers and how it works with their current connectivity products and existing back-end systems.Marian conducts the entire podcast interview from a local small business he frequents to take a break from the WFH life. He offers some firsthand knowledge on how having smart connectivity options can make a difference as small businesses recover from their pandemic setbacks. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Apr 9, 2021 • 19min

Microsoft Azure's Yousef Khalidi curates carrier clouds

Yousef Khalidi, corporate VP of Azure for Operators at Microsoft and a member of the founding team of Azure, joins the podcast to discuss how his role has evolved to working on Azure for Operators. Khalidi explains why working with service providers requires a different approach to enterprise customers."Operators have very unique requirements," says Khalidi. "The level of carrier-grade networking and availability is higher than what most other customers need. On a technical level, things like packet processing, number of loads and so forth, are much higher than what you would need for an enterprise application."Khalidi also discusses the economic benefits operators can experience by partnering with a cloud provider, such as cost savings and new monetization opportunities, and how the cloud model enables operators to "really future-proof more of the infrastructure and concentrate on your value-add versus the plumbing." Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Apr 8, 2021 • 17min

The Divide: Scott Willis, Bruce Garrison on the 'collective ecosystem' needed to close the gap

On this episode, we hear from Scott Willis, CEO of DartPoints, a colocation data center provider; as well as Bruce Garrison, chief revenue officer at Bluebird Network, a regional provider of fiber infrastructure.We discuss the different ways their companies are addressing the digital divide in the communities they serve, including in rural Iowa, and the ecosystem of companies necessary to improve access to connectivity and digital resources. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Apr 1, 2021 • 21min

The Divide: Fiber Broadband Association's Gary Bolton on the 'good news, good news' for fiber

On this episode, we hear from Gary Bolton, President and CEO of the Fiber Broadband Association: an organization of over 350 companies focused on delivering an all-fiber broadband network across the Americas.As the head of the Fiber Broadband Association, Gary is unsurprisingly pretty optimistic about fiber's potential and progress. We discuss why he says the US needs a fiber-first strategy and the legislation in Congress that could get us there, why hype around satellite broadband could be a "disaster" for communities, and why municipalities and electric cooperatives are becoming "the biggest emerging class of fiber deployers." Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Mar 31, 2021 • 21min

Light Reading's Mike Dano: Six questions about 6G

Light Reading's Mike Dano joins the podcast to discuss which service providers and vendors are pulling ahead in the planning stages for 6G.In addition, Dano examines whether 6G will reach the terabyte per second speed threshold, and whether the industry will experience a smooth transition from 5G to 6G.While much is yet to be determined in regard to the benefits of 6G, Dano says there are two tangible improvements coming with the technology: "There's a discussion that 6G will be 80GHz and above that – 95GHz – all these super high-frequency communications. Most people agree that 6G is in even higher spectrum bands." The second tangible improvement, explains Dano, is that 6G could provide more realistic VR experiences where science-fiction movies such as Ready Player One become a reality. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Mar 31, 2021 • 24min

MetTel's Ed Fox on extending enterprise IT to home networks

Ed Fox, CTO of MetTel, joins the Light Reading podcast to discuss challenges in extending SD-WAN services to home networks, whether SASE makes sense to enterprise customers and how MetTel is helping its customers navigate the onslaught of video conferencing and messaging applications."Extending SD-WAN to the home – we've done it sparingly and not as much as you would have thought," says Fox. As employees return to the office, Fox predicts that enterprises will take a hard look at the VPN, SD-WAN and SASE services available as they develop strategies around their move to the cloud and also balance IT support for remote and on-premises employees."There was a lot of trepidation [from enterprise customers] about extending the network to home," says Fox. "Also, the IT departments didn't want to do it because now I have to deal with 'Joe's' cable modem and all of a sudden I'm in his home network? Those are some of the things we saw that really surprised us." Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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