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The White House
Communications Agency (WHCA) provides premier communication
systems that enable the President and the Presidential staff
to lead the Nation efficiently. The Agency provides worldwide
audiovisual, voice, and data communications support for the
President, Vice President, Presidential Emissaries, White
House staff, the United States Secret Service, and others
as directed by the White House Military Office.
CTC had the pleasure
of helping the White House Communications Agency, a military
office, provide secure and reliable Internet and Network services
during one of President Bush's stays in Kansas City. In fact
it was a visit to the Hyatt Hotel that prompted the first
use of the Aircore
High Reliability Wireless Ring, a joint project of CTC
Wireless, CRC Wireless and the Bryant Building.
But don't take
our word for it. Below is a feature story written by Charlie
Anderson Technology Reporter for the Kansas City Business
Journal:
September 10-16, 2004 Kansas City Business
Journal (reprinted with permission)
Bush's visit puts wireless Internet through
a test
One of the biggest question marks in the wireless Internet
business is reliability. But is it reliable enough for President
Bush? Entrepreneur Graeme Gibson got the opportunity to
answer that Sept.6th, when Bush and his team rolled into
the Hyatt Regency Crown Center, where Gibson's company beams
a high-speed Internet connection from wireless transmitters.
"I'm happy to report it worked like a gem," said
Gibson, CEO of Independence-based Computers & Tele-Comm
Inc. But that's only because of some late scrambling to
meet the president's requirement of speed of 3 megabytes
a second with backup reliability. Gibson had no problem
with the first. He gave Bush's team a connection at 45 megabytes
a second "because we can," he said, but didn't
have a backup wireless signal to hop onto if his went down.
That required CTC to accelerate an agreement with Kansas
City-based Custom Radio Communications Ltd.
Custom Radio Communications, a 25 year old company that
uses licensed radio spectrum to provide signals for police
and school buses, beams a wireless signal on many of the
same rooftops as CTC. About a year ago, the two companies
began talking about a partnership so that if one signal
faded, the data could hop onto the other company's network.
When Gibson got word Sept. 2 of the president's campaign
stop, engineers from both companies worked through the next
day to launch the backup signal. "We kind of worked
rapidly," said Dennis Laughlin, general manager of
CRC. Mark Champa, vice president of sales at the Hyatt,
said the president's advance team arrived Sept. 2 and set
up a communications center in the 1,500-square-foot Van
Horn Ballroom.
Gibson said Bush and his team came armed with software that
allow White House officials to surf the Internet on a private
connection. "It was definitely an interesting first
client," he said.
-- Charlie Anderson
CTC would love to tell your success story, we have many
in our collection. You don't have to be the President of
the United States, to need something important done, on
time and in budget. All of you that pay taxes would be pleased
to learn that the White House Communications Agency was
very cost effective in getting this job done. Why don't
you call our sales department and see how we can do a special job
for you too.
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