TETRA  |  2015-04-24

ASC to exhibit Innovative Solutions at CCW2015

Source: MCCResources

ASC's experience with TETRA spans many years. The company was the first gold member of the TWISP developer network of Airbus Defence and Space

ASC's experience with TETRA, an important digital radio standard, spans many years. ASC was also the first gold member of the TWISP developer network of Airbus Defence and Space, and its recording solution, EVOIPneo, has been certified for the new Airbus TETRA network release 6.0.

Marco Mueller, Chief Operating Officer of ASC, said, "It is vital for us to participate in Critical Communications World because we know it attracts the top players in the industry, and it always fosters new ideas through discussions with prospective clients. We look forward to demonstrating our advanced recording solutions because we know that an improved performance in mission critical situations will save lives."

Mr. Mueller went on to describe some of these capabilities during emergencies and in subsequent analysis. The function "Last Call Repeat" lets the responder replay already during the call since callers can panic during stressful situations. The "keep/delete" functionality preserves a call from the beginning at any point during the course of a conversation, critical for threat calls. Security mechanisms such as an emergency power supply and backup hardware provide redundancy to ensure fail-safe operation.

Public safety agencies may also need to protect themselves from liability by collecting evidence admissible in a court of law. For this reason, recordings are time stamped, accurate to within a hundredth of a second. New speech processing capabilities also let investigators search the archives for discussions containing a threatening keyword such as "bomb." Furthermore, voice and emotion recognition can facilitate reconstruction of an incident for investigations.

Analyzing an event after it occurs encompasses an important function of communications recording: quality monitoring. Dispatchers and other responders need constant, rigorous training. Saving a few seconds off the response time can literally save lives.