Frank Moss is the founding architect behind platforms the world depends on — and holds the patents to prove it. From IBM's first cloud to Lumen's $837M edge platform, he creates the infrastructure that powers what comes next.
Most technology consultants have implemented platforms. Frank Moss has invented them. As a founding engineer on IBM's first cloud platform — brought from concept to production in a single year — and later as founding architect of Lumen's global edge cloud, he has occupied the rarest position in enterprise technology: the person in the room when the platform doesn't yet exist.
That experience produced four issued patents at the USPTO, with eight more in process. "Inference as a Service" and "Disaggregated & Distributed Composable Infrastructure" aren't research filings — they are solved engineering problems, documented at the moment of invention, by the engineer who solved them.
His work has been trusted with brand stewardship by IBM, AT&T, Lumen, and the US Navy. The systems he designed reach into the homes and devices of millions of people worldwide — every day, whether they know it or not.
One of four founding engineers on IBM's inaugural cloud platform. Concept-to-production in 12 months. First IaaS offering in IBM's history, at a time before containers existed and before "cloud" was mainstream.
Founding architect of a global edge compute network enabling <5ms response times for robotics, 5G, and industrial automation. Secured deployments with Amazon, NFL, Nokia, and T-Mobile.
Chief Architect for the Common Development Environment at USTRANSCOM under General Gregory Touhill (ret.), later the first US Federal CISO. Met and exceeded DoD security standards.
Advisory board seats, fractional CTO engagements, scoped architecture reviews, and entry-point sprints for companies where the stakes are high and the problems are genuinely hard.