Cleartronic, Inc. (CLRI) Continues to Impress Airp
Post# of 40
Already home to over 200 different unified communications focused clients, who rely on the company for robust end-to-end solutions that seamlessly span the widest range of audio input devices, from POTS (plain old telephone service), to two-way and iDEN (TDMA-based digital wireless standard invented by Motorola with integrated push-to-talk) radio networks, Cleartronic’s (OTC: CLRI) wholly owned VoiceInterop subsidiary continues to act as a one-stop-shop for government agencies and large commercial enterprises. VoiceInterop’s family of AudioMate360 IP voice gateway devices, along with cutting-edge AudioMate Software and HTTP-based AudioMate Configuration Console for managing hundreds of AudioMate360 devices at once, constitute an open-ended, device-agnostic architecture that is capable of handling everything from unified real-time voice communications, to executing programs and transferring data.
Whereas most solutions in the sector today are highly hardware-centric, VoiceInterop’s subscription-based X-Stream Access service takes a completely different approach, allowing users to leverage existing IT and telecom infrastructure in order to create a platform that enables any authorized user to securely communicate using any radio, telephony, or PC device, irrespective of frequency, manufacturer, or system-based protocols. This universalized approach also allows VoiceInterop to take a standards-based software development approach, bundling feature-rich middleware applications together which third party system integrators can resell.
One of the primary endpoints of such an approach is that these kinds of unified communications (UC) solutions can be executed in a highly scalable fashion, meaning that they can be expanded or contracted with ease to meet the size or changing dynamics of a given client. Whether the client is a small/local government agency, or a sprawling multinational with personnel all over the globe, they can rapidly implement a solution using the company’s easy to deploy software, or have VoiceInterop handle the details. The other major end point with such solutions is the associated cost-effectiveness that only such tailored architectures provide, making it so even government agencies on a tight budget can migrate to a truly 21st century UC solution without breaking the bank.
One of VoiceInterop’s strongest client sectors has and continues to be airports, an environment where real-time UC can mean the difference between life and death, both for emergency service teams, and flight crew/passengers. When a wide-body jet with over a hundred passengers crashes just shy of the runway at one of the world’s busiest international airports, response time and the ability to coordinate field personnel, as well as said personnel’s ability to communicate with one another while out in the field, is of paramount importance. When the unthinkable happens, it is too late to start worrying about a comprehensive UC solution that is hassle-free and can provide the kind of rock-solid, guaranteed response capabilities needed to avert further catastrophe.
In such an event, air traffic controllers in the tower need to be able to simply pick up a phone and instantly connect with first responders at the crash site, as well as other airport personnel. Unfortunately, many airports around the country still are woefully lacking when it comes to a robust UC solution, and so VoiceInterop has been helping clients, like Orlando’s Sanford International Airport, with custom installations and ongoing support of secure, interoperable UC solutions. Other VoiceInterop clients include such well-known airports as Dulles, Green Bay, Omaha, Reagan, and West Palm Beach.
The latest client to hop on board is Edmonton Regional Airports Authority, which manages emergency response at both Edmonton International and the Villeneuve Airport. The company is tasked with providing its site-customized VoiceInterop Crash Phone system in both cases, a system utilizing the company’s proprietary software and leveraging both standard commercial communications devices and existing infrastructure, like IP telephones, two-way radios, and the overhead paging/alert systems, all organized and finely tuned to meet the specific needs of each facility’s personnel.
Moreover, because the system architectures are so highly scalable and built around the software as the real backbone for connectivity, the VoiceInterop Crash Phone systems installed at these facilities can grow as the locations do, allowing for cheap, easy, and effective changes to be made in the future, with system upgrades completed simply by making minor alterations to the software environment. It’s easy to see why airports and emergency first responders and agencies like fire and rescue, as well as law enforcement, trust Cleartronic to provide mission-critical UC solutions, given the low cost, broad-spectrum capability, and easy scalability they provide.
Take a closer look at the company by visiting www.cleartronicinc.com
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