Thomas Simpson

Thomas was formerly TeleGeography's marketing associate.

Recent Posts

Nov 3, 2016

The Carrier and the Cloud: What Will Their Relationship Look Like?

Senior Analyst Brianna Boudreau brings her expertise to Capacity Asia in Hong Kong, December 6-7.

Join Brianna as she moderates the panel "The Carrier and the Cloud: What Will Their Relationship Look Like?" at 4:15 on December 7.

Oct 27, 2016

Meet TeleGeography's Africa Experts at AfricaCom 2016

TeleGeography's Africa research experts Paul Brodsky and Patrick Christian will be traveling to Cape Town for AfricaCom, November 15-17, 2016.

Oct 25, 2016

Should MVNOs See OTT Players as Another Competitor?

TeleGeography's Tom Leins is traveling to London for the MVNOs Networking Congress November 1-2, 2016.

Tom, who puts together TeleGeography's popular MVNO Monday round-up in CommsUpdate, brings his expertise in the field to the event stage. 

Oct 20, 2016

Creating Partnerships for Changing Business Needs at Capacity Europe

Join Erik Kreifeldt at Capacity Europe November 7-9, 2016 in Paris, as he chairs two innovative panel sessions.

Oct 3, 2016

Mike Bisaha at Open Networking User Group

Mike Bisaha is heading to the Open Networking User Group (ONUG) Conference in New York City on October 24-25. Meet with Mike at ONUG to discuss TeleGeography's enterprise pricing research.

Sep 30, 2016

TeleGeography at WAN Summit London

Greg Bryan, TeleGeography's Senior Manager of Enterprise Research, will chair our 4th annual WAN Summit London October 18-19, presented by Capacity Conferences and TeleGeography.

Sep 29, 2016

Why We Need More Submarine Cables (And Why We Don't)

TeleGeography's Alan Mauldin returns to Submarine Networks World in Singapore, October 17-19. Alan will be delivering the presentation "Why We Need More Submarine Cables (and Why We Don't)" at 9:20 am on October 17. 

Sep 28, 2016

[Webinar] Multi-Terabit Submarine Cables…Too Big to Fail?

 

Submarine networks became critical infrastructure long ago.

A subsea cable fault that interrupts 120 Gb/s traffic is a bad thing. But a fault that interrupts tens of terabits of traffic is quite another.

Sep 26, 2016

Tom Shepherd at Broadband World Forum

TeleGeography's Tom Shepherd is heading to the ExCel Center in London for the Broadband World Forum on October 18-20, 2016.

Meet up with Tom at the event to catch up on the latest from TeleGeography's GlobalComms team. 

Sep 23, 2016

Network Sourcing and Cost Considerations for WAN Designs

Senior Analyst Brianna Boudreau is heading to Orlando for the annual CAUCUS IT Procurement Summit October 12-14, 2016. She'll be delivering a presentation on Network Sourcing & Cost Considerations for WAN Designs on October 12. 

Brianna and moderator Robert Wright of Humana will discuss how corporate WAN managers decide which services meet their evolving network requirements while controlling costs.

Recent Presentation Posts

[Webinar] Multi-Terabit Submarine Cables…Too Big to Fail?

 

Submarine networks became critical infrastructure long ago.

A subsea cable fault that interrupts 120 Gb/s traffic is a bad thing. But a fault that interrupts tens of terabits of traffic is quite another.

Mythbusters: Revenge of the Cable Myths, Part III

In Part II of TeleGeography's Mythbusters presentation at SubOptic 2016, Alan Mauldin busted five myths that ranged from whether capacity demand is doubling every two years to a quote from the movie Gravity that the destruction of a single satelite would lead to half of North America "losing their Facebook." In the concluding part of this series, Tim Stronge returns to the stage to take on myths about energy costs pushing decisions about content providers' data center locations, multiple parties building on the same route and "adult" content driving most Internet traffic. 

Mythbusters: Revenge of the Cable Myths, Part II

In the first part of TeleGeography’s Mythbusters presentation at SubOptic 2016, Tim Stronge busted myths about NSA Surveillance, decreases in connectivity to the United States and shark attacks on the internet. In Part II, Alan Mauldin investigates whether submarine cable capacity is doubling every two years, if content providers really need fiber pairs everywhere, if the global network is more resilient than ever before, whether Netflix has huge subsea capacity requirements and the possibility that the destruction of a single satelite would cause half of North America to "lose their Facebook".