Avsnitt
-
Vinay Prabhu, Director of Product Management at Graphiant, is our latest guest on TeleGeography Explains the Internet. He recently joined us to discuss the intricacies of moving data around the globe.
Vinay outlines the reasons you should be thinking about your data in motion and what Graphiant is doing to ensure its safe passage, particularly as AI becomes more prevalent.
-
To truly explain the internet, sometimes we have to get into where your internet comes from. For that, our guest today is Rutger Bevaart, CEO and Co-founder of GNX.
As you'll hear, Rutger has a deep history in the telecom industry and founded GNX to streamline internet sourcing, which is undoubtedly a pain point for many listeners.
We discuss the shift away from MPLS and toward the internet and how that transition can bring many benefits to an enterprise; however, it also comes with complexity and new challenges, especially in sourcing and managing internet links worldwide.
From This Episode:
Episode 606 | When Networking and Security CollideEpisode 501 | Are These WAN Sourcing Trends Real or Just Hype?Episode 413 | A Brief History of Networking as a ServiceTeleGeography Literally Explains the WANAbout our WAN Cost BenchmarkAbout our WAN Geography Benchmark -
Saknas det avsnitt?
-
There's a common theme we encounter here at TeleGeography Explains the Internet.
It goes like this: the enterprise WAN has undergone significant changes in the past several years to align the network with digital transformation, cloud adoption, rising bandwidths, and cost control. These changes—while making the network more resilient and affordable—can introduce new challenges in complexity and management.
Our guest today is Marcel Stadler, Product Manager of SD-WAN at Open Systems.
Marcel joins our semi-annual conversation on this landscape; he outlines how managed SD-WAN providers like Open Systems approach these issues with their enterprise customers. (Yes, we chat about SASE and integrating security into an SD-WAN because we know what the listeners want.)
From This Episode:
Building a Network Business Case: Essential Data Insights for CIOsEpisode 508 | How Geography Influences Network SecurityEpisode 421 | What Makes a WAN Truly Secure?Episode 414 | SASE and SecureEpisode 312 | SASE Isn't Revolutionary. It's Evolutionary.TeleGeography Literally Explains the WANWhat SD-WAN Is and How It’s Deployed -
Where are we building data centers? Why? What markets are primed for interconnectivity glory? Which ones are getting left in the dust?
We've heard these questions again and again. So we did what any reasonable telecom data provider would do: we developed an interactive tool to rank the world's best-connected and fastest-growing cities, scored on a scale of 0-100 across nine key categories.
This week's guest on TeleGeography Explains the Internet is our resident data center expert Jon Hjembo. He walks us through how (and why!) we developed the Market Connectivity Score and reveals what initial rankings tell us about the interconnectivity landscape and metro areas to watch like Kuala Lumpur.
From This Episode:
Episode 603 | What Network Managers Should Know About AI and Machine LearningEpisode 308 | Data Centers and Digital TransformationTeleGeography Literally Explains Data CentersJon Hjembo at PTC 2024About the Data Center Research ServiceQuarterly Market Connectivity Scores -
We're back on the AI beat, specifically looking at how it can support corporate network automation.
Per usual, we had a little help. Our guest today is Jamie Pugh, CTO at Globalgig.
Jamie joined the show not only to ponder all things automation but also to discuss enterprise network orchestration in the era of an increasingly complex WAN.
-
It's 2024. We obviously had to do an AI episode of the pod.
And for that, we welcome our guest Michael Wynston, Director of Network & Security Architecture at Fiserv.
Michael is the first esteemed member of TeleGeography Explains the Internet's four-timers club. Indeed, as I'm sure you've guessed, he's back on the show for the fourth time. And this time around he's here to help us better understand how AI is developing as a network management tool.
-
TeleGeography Explains the Internet is back from summer break.
We return a little older, a little wiser, and you can bet that we've done the summer reading. To that end, we're starting this season with a classic TeleGeography Explains deep dive.
The topic? U.S. telecom law!
Greg is joined by Jeff Long, an attorney in private practice with broad experience in both the data center and telecom industry.
-
Over the past five weeks, we've endeavored to explain precisely how data moves around the world, covering the basics of internet, transport networks, data centers, and the cloud along the way.
Today we answer our final, lingering question: What is a WAN?
First, let's get definitions out of the way. WAN stands for wide area network, which came out of the term LAN, or local area network.
Today's episode will help you brush up on the evolution of the WAN. We'll also hear from Brianna Boudreau, TeleGeography's current SD-WAN guru.
From This Episode:
What is the Internet?What is a Transport Network?What Are Data Centers?What is the Cloud?Episode 508 | How Geography Influences Network SecurityEpisode 501 | Are These WAN Sourcing Trends Real or Just Hype?Episode 425 | Surveying the WANscapeEpisode 421 | What Makes a WAN Truly Secure?Download the WAN Manager Survey Executive SummaryWhat SD-WAN Is and How It’s Deployed -
You may have heard a popular saying: There is no cloud, only other people’s computers.
To explain how it works, Senior Research Manager Patrick Christian joins us to talk cloud. We explain what it means to get something "as-a-service," hyperscalers, CDNs, and how companies get to the cloud.
From This Episode:
What is the Internet?What is a Transport Network?What Are Data Centers?Explore our Cloud Infrastructure MapEpisode 510 | Head in the Cloud, Toes at the EdgeEpisode 505 | It's a Bird, It's a Plane, It's Super CloudEpisode 410 | A Telecom Year in Review, Part 1Episode 304 | Understanding the Multicloud-Verse of Madness -
We're back at it with episode three of our five-part podcast special that explains the nuts and bolts of the internet. We haven’t yet covered exactly how and where those networks meet and exchange traffic with each other and access their destinations.
So today, it's data center time.
Senior Research Manager Jon Hjembo was on hand to help us work through data center types, their defining features, and what happens inside these facilities. We talk about who owns these structures and how their geography informs the way the internet works.
From This Episode:
What is the Internet?What is a Transport Network?Episode 508 | How Geography Influences Network SecurityEpisode 410 | A Telecom Year in Review, Part 1Episode 402 | Data Centers and the Opportunity at the EdgeEpisode 308 | Data Centers and Digital TransformationWhere in the World Is the Largest Data Center Hub?Does 70% of the World’s Internet Traffic Flow Through Virginia? -
Welcome back to our five-part podcast special that literally explains how the internet you know and love works.
Last week we covered the most basic question: what is the internet?
Today, we tunnel deeper, exploring the physical transport networks behind this seemingly invisible, omnipresent information superhighway. Plus we get a little help from TeleGeography's own Paul Brodsky, Peter Wood, and Lane Burdette for this one
From This Episode:
What is the Internet?Explore our Submarine Cable MapEpisode 503 | The Total Transformation of Latin American TelecomEpisode 424 | What Happens to Cables When The Earth Moves Under Our Feet?Episode 418 | Behind the Seas: Making Our Famous Submarine Cable MapEpisode 416 | The Death of Voice Has Been Greatly ExaggeratedEpisode 404 | What Role Do Satellites Play in Global Communication? -
What is the internet? Simply put, the internet is a network of computers.
Computers can only understand two things: on and off. Everything that we do on the internet is in binary—a series of 1s and 0s representing on and off—which gives instructions to your computer to do all the amazing things it does.
This means that the very bottom of the internet is a system for sending those 1s and 0s over wires (or spectrum in some cases). Whatever you do on the internet—email, videos, chats—the information is translated into that binary by your devices and then transmitted via packets.
We cover this process and lots more in the first episode of our five-part special to, well, literally explain the internet.
-
On TeleGeography Explains the Internet, we often focus on the long-haul, zeroing in on the network portion of telecoms. Today, with the help of Tiago Rodrigues, President and CEO of the Wireless Broadband Alliance (WBA), we’re switching things up a bit.
Drawing upon his vast expertise in the Wi-Fi space, Tiago steps into the hot seat to outline the key issues in the wireless LAN.
This episode considers Wi-Fi 6, 6E, and 7 developments, OpenRoaming™ that allows seamless connection across different Wi-Fi networks, and Wi-Fi’s role in emerging solutions like NaaS.
We also discuss the digital divide and how to best use the limited resource of spectrum to ensure connectivity in our increasingly digital world.
From This Episode:
WBA Annual Industry Report 2024Episode 504 | How NaaS Relates to SDN and AutomationEpisode 409 | The Digital Divide EpisodeEpisode 402 | Data Centers and the Opportunity at the EdgeEpisode 315 | How Enterprises Are Implementing NaaS (And Leaving MPLS)Episode 313 | The Need for NaaS -
Today we welcome Nokia's Paul Unbehagen to the pod.
Paul has a deep history in the networking world, so he approaches his role at Nokia—NE Americas CTO—from the perspective of a network engineer.
Although our main topics this week are enterprise cloud and right-sizing cloud utilization, we use those as a springboard into many topics circling the state of the network in 2023.
We touch on the history of the enterprise’s move into the cloud and why some companies have reevaluated their cloud strategy in recent years.
As it so often does, the geography of the cloud comes up, along with Paul’s take on location and design in the cloud. This brings us to the edge—not only what it means and where it is, but some of the new and exciting use cases of what edge computing facilitates.
Embedded in that conversation is also 5G and how mobile can push the network into being a central part of the business. And we can’t resist bringing up AI/ML.
From This Episode
The price of managed cloud servicesX celebrates 60% savings from cloud exitRead @XEng postEpisode 509 | Why 4G Is Still Relevant for Enterprise ConnectivityEpisode 508 | How Geography Influences Network SecurityEpisode 505 | It's a Bird, It's a Plane, It's Super CloudEpisode 402 | Data Centers and the Opportunity at the Edge -
This week on TeleGeography Explains the Internet, we welcome SmartCIC CEO Toby Forman to the show.
Toby comes to us with a global perspective on the development of fixed wireless access (FWA) and its potential as a disruptive technology in the enterprise connectivity space.
After nailing down a solid definition of FWA in the market today, we run through the factors to consider when deploying FWA. Toby explains what Cellsmart—a division of SmartCIC focused on FWA—does for service providers and enterprises interested in going through this process.
Next, Toby offers some real-world use cases and shares how he sees the fixed wireless and wireless markets developing over the next few years, briefly delving into the broader implications of broadband access for economic development around the world.
This episode should leave you with a deeper understanding of the development of FWA, but also the ability to evaluate and plan for what is coming next.
From This Episode
Cellsmart Mapping Project: Heatmap of Tests | Tests By Date | Last 24 Hours Drive TestingEpisode 508 | How Geography Influences Network SecurityEpisode 504 | How NaaS Relates to SDN and AutomationEpisode 219 | NaaS, the Cloud, and the Future of 5G2G and 3G Shutdowns Continue -
Today’s TeleGeography Explains the Internet guest comes to the security world with a deep background in cloud and networks.
Joe DePalo is Chief Platform Officer at Netskope, and the ideal person to help us understand how and why location matters in network security.
We first identify how the network has changed over the past few years, gauging the impact on both the threat landscape and how networks perform generally. Also on the agenda: why middle mile performance and security should be part of the equation, and how lessons learned from the challenges of creating CDNs are instructive about the modern issues in network security.
Finally, Joe offers a particularly interesting take on a question that comes up often on the podcast—what does it mean to have a WAN in this environment?
From This Episode
Episode 505 | It's a Bird, It's a Plane, It's Super CloudEpisode 421 | What Makes a WAN Truly Secure?Episode 415 | Unpacking Telecom Predictions of the PastEpisode 414 | SASE and SecureEpisode 409 | The Digital Divide EpisodeEpisode 309 | How Do You Solve a Problem Like Middle Mile? -
Today on TeleGeography Explains the Internet, we're asking the big questions about mobile advertising. Luckily, Ross Flynn of the Mobile Ecosystem Forum is with us to explain, which is exactly what we do on this show.
Ross has a background in digital advertising, making him the ideal person to walk us through advertising formulas that pair ads with IPs.
He talks to Greg about programmatic advertising—not just what it is, but how the practice impacts the mobile market. And then we get to the fun stuff: how do these advertising practices actually impact the mobile market? Is mobile advertising evolving? Does it present unique opportunities?
From This Episode
About the Mobile Ecosystem ForumEpisode 423: Staying a Step Ahead of Mobile FraudstersMobile Calling’s Share of International Traffic Declinesi3forum Tracks COVID-19 Impact on International Voice TrafficMobile Advertising: Preparing for the Big Re-Set -
In August we were pumped to join a meeting of the OH Network User Group at the fabulous BrewDog hotel and brewery in Columbus, Ohio. (If you're not familiar with the Network User Association, they're worth checking out.)
The Ohio chapter kindly agreed to let host Greg Bryan do a live talk on how enterprise WANs are changing and what the implications of those changes are for network costs.
We brought lots of WAN data, fielded tons of questions, and very much enjoyed the networking vibes in Ohio.
From This Episode
How Common SASE Products Are Being OfferedEpisode 501: Are These WAN Sourcing Trends Real or Just Hype?Eight Enterprise Products, ExplainedHow the Cost of Network Ownership Can Change Over TimeSD-What? A Quick Explanation of What SD-WAN Is and How It’s DeployedEpisode 425: Surveying the WANscape -
We're thrilled to welcome William Collins, Principal Cloud Architect at Alkira, to the pod.
We asked William to talk us through the history of enterprise cloud and highlight a few of the bigger issues in enterprise cloud networking today. His answers might surprise you.
We even talk about supercloud—what it is and what the implications are. Grab your super suit and punch the play button to hear the full discussion.
From This Episode
Alkira Boosts Global Expansion Efforts for Enterprises with Cloud Exchange Point Presence in ChinaMapping Out Asia’s Cloud Data Center and Connectivity MarketThese Two Regions Account For About 65% of the World’s Cloud Data CentersHow Common SASE Products Are Being OfferedCloud Infrastructure MapCloud and WAN Research Service - Visa fler