Revcord Successfully Completes NG9-1-1 Voice Logger Recording Testing at NENA ICE-1 Interoperability Event at Texas A & M University

Posted: Thursday, January 28, 2010
Updated: January 28th, 2010 09:02 AM GMT-05:00
Enlarge Article Text Reduce Article Text Print Article Email this Article to a Friend

Revcord Successfully Completes NG9-1-1 Voice Logger Recording Testing at NENA ICE-1 Interoperability Event at Texas A & M University






EMS Podcasts
The EMS Squadcast
The EMS Squadcast is a new podcast series dedicated to discussions relevant to the world of EMS today. This month: Seattle/King County's Resuscitation Academy and the current epinephrine shortage.

Open Airways: Stories from the back of the ambulance
EMS responders share some of the most meaningful cases of their careers, sometimes with humor and always with compassion. We hope that they will help us improve your practice and inspire a new generation of caregivers.


More on EMSResponder.com
Discuss today's top stories, the latest trends and techniques and more, including ALS & BLS topics.

From clinical care to EMS Life, the top emergency medical service education & feature content.

EMS Magazine is the most authoritative printed source for clinical and educational material designed to improve the delivery of prehospital emergency medical care.

Press Release

January 26, 2010 Houston, Texas – Revcord successfully completed NG9-1-1 VoIP digital recording testing at the National Emergency Number Association Industry Collaboration Event (ICE 1) in November. Texas A & M University hosted the ICE 1 week long NG9-1-1 event where Revcord and 15 other vendors from New Zealand, Canada and the United States tested interoperability in simple and complex emergency call scenarios. More than 50 peer-to-peer interface tests were performed by the 26 engineers in attendance.

Revcord’s president, Charles “Trey” Schwarz, said: “Revcord is committed to providing a multimedia (voice, video, text etc.) recorder that is fully compliant to the NG9-1-1 standards, including those not yet published. The NENA ICE 1 interoperability test was a great experience for us and we will certainly continue to work with NENA as the technology continues to develop.”

NG9-1-1 standards developed by the NENA Technical Committee and other SDOs formed the basis of tests conducted. Based on the number of tests successfully conducted, it is obvious that the standards used as a basis of the tests are substantially complete and clear.

Revcord will continue to develop standards based multimedia recorders for public safety as well as commercial applications. Mr. Schwarz added: “Proprietary recorders are a thing of the past and Revcord’s architecture is ready for the future with state-of-the-art enterprise technology for the Next Generation 9-1-1 public safety applications.”

Based in Houston, Texas, Revcord has a nationwide network of dealers for both public safety and commercial markets. In partnership with NTS (National Telecom Services) Revcord provides nationwide installation, training, service and maintenance with 15,000 available trained technicians.

Contact: Guy Churchouse 281-404-5306, gchurchouse@revcord.com

Web site: http://www.revcord.com


E-mail This Story Print This Story



Share your thoughts, advice, opinions, and expertise @ EMSResponder.com

     


Email Alerts