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By PSIT Staff
2012 Radio Outlook for Public Safety
(This article was originally published in Public Safety IT Jan/Feb 2012)
By Mike Scott
Oregon’s emergency radio system has fallen into disrepair and is outdated. Now the question remains whether a scaled-back, repair-focused version of the original $600 million program to build a new system can produce the needed changes with less than half the money that could cost the financially strapped state nearly $600 million.
(This article was originally published in Public Safety IT Jan/Feb 2012)
By Mark Evans
Turn to smart power management storage systems to save money.
(This article was originally published in Police Fleet Manager May/Jun 2011)
PRYME iPad Giveaway at IWCE
(This article was originally published in Public Safety IT Jan/Feb 2011)
By Ken Collier
The county of Santa Barbara, Calif., contains over 2,500 square miles of breathtaking and sometimes dangerous terrain, including rocky beaches, unblemished coastal islands teeming with wildlife, and the steep inland mountains of the Los Padres National Forest. When things go wrong, the members of the Santa Barbara County Search and Rescue (SBCSAR) team are responsible for finding and rescuing missing and injured persons within Santa Barbara’s backcountry.
(This article was originally published in Public Safety IT Nov/Dec 2010)
C4i, an Australian based company with its U.S. headquarters in Reston, Va., unveiled several new features to their SwitchplusIP™ interoperable radio/telephony dispatch product at the 2010 APCO Show in Houston.
(This article was originally published in Public Safety IT Sep/Oct 2010)
By PSIT Staff
Kenwood U.S.A. Corporation Communications Sector, based in Suwanee, Ga., is a leading provider of mobile and portable radios and custom systems to public safety, government and commercial users as well as amateur radio equipment.
(This article was originally published in Public Safety IT Jul/Aug 2010)
By Copper Darlinger
It is important that law enforcement and first responders be trained in the use of radio equipment as these are tools that they use on a daily basis and often under stressful conditions. A variety of training methods exist, but regardless of which method a department implements, training must be ongoing and updated as new features are added to the radio system.
(This article was originally published in Law and Order Jul 2010)