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Maryland college adopts two-way radios for campus safety

Sep 10, 2010 4:14 PM

From CampusTechnology.com: Washington College in Chestertown, Md., has adopted a new digital two-way radio system from Motorola to replace an analog system that was cutting out on users as the campus grew. The college has distributed Mototrbo portable radios to public-safety officers, athletics department employees, and building and grounds crew.

The police officers found that as new buildings rose at the 180-acre campus, their legacy radios were unable to penetrate the new buildings because of structural and electronic interference. While they also carried cell phones, sometimes those devices suffered signal gaps too.

Magnum Electronics, a Motorola reseller, did a proof of concept of the new digital radios, including the XPR 6500 and 6350 lines, which confirmed that they increased coverage and reliability and also extended reach beyond the borders, where off-campus activities took place.

The radios feature emergency signaling to send a help signal or text to a person or group; location tracking through a built-in GPS modem; a talk-around function that lets the user speak through a dispatcher or from unit to unit; and transmit interrupt, which allows the user to interrupt another conversation.
 



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