To operate safe and reliable telecom system, the company came to MTSI to design the equipment to track down the source.
Epic Data International approached MTSI to help design a workstation solution that delivers advanced user identity authentication, and automated time and materials tracking for knowledge and manufacturing workers.
Epic Data International reached out to MTSI to develop a custom terminal for Lockheed Martin. The defense giant needed a low-cost, simple way to integrate sophisticated and automated identification, project tracking and secure-access capabilities in a highly sensitive environment.
Before Dell, Compaq was the world’s top personal computer maker, and came to MTSI to help develop four new stations in their personal computer manufacturing and reliability analysis laboratories.
A consortium had defined a new Extended Industry Standard Architecture (EISA) bus computer market. These computers were to be used for high-speed file servers and work stations, and required new disk, tape, and printer controllers.
For decades, law enforcement have supervised parolees with electronic tracking devices embedded in ankle bracelets. MTSI was one of the early designers of the technology.
A client developing a new-generation automotive burglar alarm for the Ford Taurus was behind schedule. MTSI leveraged its experience in precision and swiftness to bring the project on time and to completion.
Dynamic random-access memory, or DRAM, is commonplace today in computers which use it to run their programs. Back in the 1970s, Mostek was emerging as the world’s top DRAM manufacturer and developed a circuitry trick called address multiplexing.
If you used a Z80 chip back in the 1980s, it almost certainly passed through a single room and its Farchild Sentry 610 test system. Mostek had grown into the one’s top producer of DRAM, and every Z80 microprocessor went through tests there.
A major satellite T.V. company in the U.S. pay-per-view market had a system to provide multi-video graphics services for hotels and hospitals. MTSI engineers conducted a comprehensive study of the entire system, and followed up with the redesign that the company needed.
There’s nothing like blasting out an image the size of a behemoth to light up a dark room.
Every bowling lane needs to know when a player has bowled a strike or sunk the ball into the gutter. The task falls to electronic pin fall detectors. MTSI developed a system to check accuracy and repeatability.
Long ago, Casablanca Fan Company — an industry leader in luxury ceiling fans — developed an innovative idea to control a ceiling fan and a lamp. With technical support from MTSI, production rapidly expanded.
Lynx Systems has been featured Security Journal Americas with Lynx Systems Sales Director Fernando Esteban. Esteban discusses how alarm and intruder detection systems have evolved to include panic buttons.
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