Founder
Mark A Gregory
Mark A Gregory is an Associate Professor in the School of Engineering, RMIT University, Melbourne, Australia. He was born in Melbourne, Australia and received a PhD and a Master of Engineering from RMIT University, Melbourne, Australia in 2008 and 1992 respectively, and a Bachelor of Engineering (Electrical)(Honours) from University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia in 1984.
Mark is a former Army officer who spent four years working on major defence projects, and is a director of an engineering consultancy. Dr Gregory is a Fellow of the Institute of Engineers Australia, a Senior Member of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc. His research interests include cyber-security, fiber network design and operation, wireless networks and technical risk. Dr Gregory received an Australian Learning and Teaching Council Citation in 2009.
Mark was appointed Managing Editor and Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Telecommunications and the Digital Economy in January 2015 and completed a major update of the Journal systems and processes prior to retiring from the Board in January 2021. He has been a regular public policy commentator on telecommunications, especially on the status and future of the National Broadband Network, via the ABC, TheNewDaily, The Australian, Business Spectator, The Conversation and InnovationAus.com
On opaque NBN Co reporting
NBN co's opaque reporting attracts criticism.Read the original article on InnovationAusRead the article below
The CVC price is right for NBN Co
The announcement by NBN Co that a new CVC charge model would be introduced in June was discussed in
Chaotic plan for regional comms
The Turnbull Government's Regional Broadband Scheme aims to partially fund NBN Co's loss making fixed-wireless and satellite services.
USO hurdles yet to be overcome
The Productivity Commission has released its draft report on the
Telstra separation is a lesson learnt from the UK
Today in InnovationAus the decision by the UK communications regulator Ofcom to notify BT that it is to legally separate from Openreach is disc