John Osmon

John Osmon is a network architect focused on the challenges of building
and operating resilient regional infrastructure and improving how
networks interconnect beyond traditional peering hubs. With more than
25 years of experience in packet networking, his work centers on
addressing structural issues such as unnecessary long-haul backhaul,
avoidable latency, and connectivity gaps affecting geographically
distributed networks.

He is a principal driver behind the Albuquerque Internet Exchange
(ABQIX), a neutral interconnection platform spanning multiple downtown
Albuquerque data centers. The project coordinates shared infrastructure
— including rack space, wavelengths, equipment, and operational
resources — to strengthen regional peering ecosystems, keep local
traffic local, and improve connectivity outcomes across the Southwest.

John serves on the board of OIX (oix.org), contributing to open
interconnection practices and industry collaboration. He also chairs the
City of Albuquerque Cable, Internet, and PEG Advisory Board and consults
with the State of New Mexico on the Statewide Education Network (SEN),
helping bridge engineering practice with public-sector broadband
strategy and infrastructure deployment.

His technical interests include regional network architecture, optical
transport systems, routing and interconnection design, and practical
approaches to building resilient connectivity in distributed
environments. He occasionally explains packet networking
enthusiastically, sometimes even when nobody asked.

John Osmon will join us as a delegate at Networking Field Day 40 on April 8, 2026!