Ryan Pettijohn
Vice President, Head of the Optical Division at Fujitsu Network Communications
Ryan Pettijohn is solutions development manager at Fujitsu Network Communications Inc. He develops large, full-turnkey systems Integration opportunities in the wireless, utilities, transportation, and ARRA-funded markets. Ryan also serves as networking technology subject matter expert for large-scale network implementation composed of OSI Layer 1-3 technologies, from inception through delivery. His technical expertise and analytical skill enable him to recommend and develop solutions in emerging technologies, network services architecture design, network integration, and application support requirements.
Over his 25-year telecom industry career, Ryan has occupied solution development, business analytics and network engineering roles at Fibertower, Genuity, and GTE in addition to Fujitsu.
Ryan holds a BSEE from Purdue University in West Lafayette, IN, and an MBA from the University of Dallas, in Irving, TX.
Ryan Pettijohn
What’s your plan to ensure your Open RAN or wireless network meets your customers’ current and future performance demands? I’m Ryan Pettijohn, here for an open dialogue about a critical aspect of mobile network integration: RF planning and optimization. Maximize ROI & stay competitive Mobile networks are complex and must meet fast-changing demands. Staying competitive
Ryan Pettijohn
In today’s smart manufacturing environment, agility is crucial. Market leadership hinges on the ability to quickly and accurately process valuable data insights. Yet as the sheer volume of available data grows exponentially, many manufacturers lack the networking power to capitalize on this valuable information. A carefully planned private 5G network provides the security, performance and
Ryan Pettijohn
RAN Deployment isn’t what it used to be Working on your car’s engine used to be a lot simpler. Accessing the pistons and cylinders, adjusting the timing, replacing the belts—sure, you had to know what you were doing, but it was pretty straightforward. Not so much anymore. There’s so much that needs to be done