Posts Tagged ‘Wireless’

ExakTime attendance software for wireless devices includes facial recognition

December 15th, 2011

Metal punch clocks and cardboard time cards have become so last millennium with the advent of software-based time-tracking systems aimed at construction sites.

California-based ExakTime has put a futuristic spin on punching in by incorporating facial recognition and Global Positioning System (GPS) tracking into its PocketClock/GPS time tracking and attendance software system.

Employees clock in and out by punching a green or red touch-screen button on their current iPhone, iPad, Android, BlackBerry, or Windows Mobile Smartphone or Tablet. The company’s FaceFront Biometrics photo verification feature uses the device’s front-facing camera lens to snap a photo of employees as they punch the clock.

“This eliminates what’s called buddy-punching—one employee clocking in for another,” says ExakTime’s vice president of marketing, Casey Powers.

“The photos are sent to the office along with the clock data where the bookkeeper can match the employee field photos to their master photos stored in the office as part of our TimeSummit software package.”

Powers notes that a contractor employing 10 employees could lose upwards of 400 hours of work time each year if each employee misses just 10 minutes of work per day. Some contractors purchase smartphones and licences for all of their employees in order to fully roll out the system, while others purchase a licence only for the superintendent, who can punch employees in and out on their behalf.

Recent additions to the package include French-language support and GPS tracking of workers through their hand-helds. Superintendents can map the perimeter of the job site using GPS co-ordinates, a parameter known as a geo-fence. Even if the worker needs to visit multiple job sites, each of those sites can be tagged with its own project name and workers can indicate when they’ve moved from one site to another.

“If they clock in at a project site and then clock out at the beach, the TimeSummit software will flag them,” says Powers.

“What’s cool is that you’ll not only know that they punched out at the wrong place, you’ll know exactly where they were when they did it.”

Additional functionality allows contractors to track the equipment used by each worker. Contractors assign a unique name to each piece of equipment, then track it in real-time by employee and worksite.

“If you take backhoe 1 or jackhammer 3, workers can indicate that on the smartphone,” says Powers.

“You now know who last used the equipment, how long they used it and on which site the equipment is now located. The contractor can maintain a full history of each piece of field equipment.”

Workers can also incorporate field notes into their daily reports, capturing pictures, notes and voice recordings of anything noteworthy on the project site, such as unsafe conditions or work that requires more attention. These notes are logged and sent to the central office.

Whether the reach of the new software appears beneficial or overly authoritarian usually depends on the mindset of the individual worker, notes Powers.

“Workers who are honest love it, because the idea of misrepresenting the number of hours worked offends their sense of honour,” he says.

Source:http://dcnonl.com/article/id48015/–exaktime-attendance-software-for-wireless-devices-includes-facial-recognition

Verizon Wireless adopts Alcatel-Lucent’s Motive software for 4G network

October 28th, 2011

Mobile Device Management is part of the Alcatel-Lucent Motive mobility portfolio

Verizon Wireless is using Mobile Device Management (MDM) software from Motive, a division of Alcatel-Lucent to manage the growing number of 4G LTE smartphones and tablets on its 4G LTE network.

MDM allows customers to set up their 4G LTE devices and automatically receive software updates and upgrades.

Mobile Device Management is part of the Alcatel-Lucent Motive mobility portfolio and it is a key element of Alcatel-Lucent’s Customer Experience Transformation (CXT) offering.

With Mobile Device Management, service providers can focus on a customer-first strategy through the delivery of best-in-class customer experience management through a portfolio of purpose-built offerings and patented consulting methodologies.

Service providers can confidently transform the customer experience in a way that fosters brand loyalty and establishes superior relationships with customers by making the strategic changes.

Mobile Device Management is powered by technology from Alcatel-Lucent’s Motive Product Division and their strategic alliance partner WDS.

Verizon Wireless Network executive director Ed Diaz said it’s important that Verizon customers and employees can set up and use 4G LTE devices and applications as easily as possible, so the customers can further optimise how they experience the power and speed of our 4G LTE network.

“The Motive solution is critical to delivering that experience,” said Diaz.

Alcatel-Lucent Americas Region president Robert Vrij said Verizon Wireless is perfectly positioned to help satisfy the consumer appetite for new 4G LTE products and services.

“The easier and more intuitive we can make device set-up and management, the more positive the overall experience is for the end user. Our Motive solution enables efficient, well-organized device management to help transform the customer experience,” said Vrij.

Source:http://mobility.cbronline.com/news/verizon-wireless-adopts-alcatel-lucents-motive-software-for-4g-lte-network-261011

National Instruments buys wireless technology companies for $96 million

May 24th, 2011

National Instruments wants to become a bigger player in providing tools for engineers who design and build wireless equipment. On Monday it announced the acquisition of one California company and the pending purchase of another.

National Instruments will pay $58 million for AWR Corp. of El Segundo, Calif., and already has paid $38 million for Phase Matrix Inc. of San Jose, Calif.

AWR, with more than 100 employees, is a leading developer of engineering software for high-frequency wireless systems; its customers include aerospace, defense, communications and test equipment companies. Phase Matrix, with about 50 workers, makes test and measurement equipment for high-frequency radio and microwave communications equipment.

Both companies will be wholly owned subsidiaries that will provide technical talent and products that the much larger National Instruments can sell. National Instruments, with annual revenue of more than $873 million, is the largest supplier of software-enabled “virtual instruments” used by scientists and engineers in a wide range of markets.

In recent months, the company has made several moves toward accelerating its growth. Last year, Alex Davern was named the company’s first chief operating officer, allowing CEO James Truchard to focus on product strategy and a long-term vision.

Davern said he wanted to install a management structure to help the company grow into “a multibillion-dollar organization.”

Analyst Richard Eastman with R.W. Baird & Co. said the new acquisitions “seem like nice fits.”

“It bolsters their efforts,” he said. “They have been moving fairly aggressively into the RF and microwave space. It adds to their software capabilities on the simulation and design side.”

The acquisitions, Truchard said, underscore the company’s commitment to expanding in the wireless engineering marketplace.

“Wireless is a big part of the test instrumentation market,” Truchard said. “If you want to be in the instrumentation business, wireless and (radio frequency technology) are critical components.”

National Instruments said the combined revenue of the two companies fell in the range of $38 million to $48 million for the past 12 months.

Davern said National Instruments presently has a small share in the wireless instrumentation market, “but there is a lot of opportunity for growth.”

Davern said his company had worked closely with both companies for years and had long been interested in acquiring them.

“Part of the value of the acquired companies,” said Eric Starkloff, vice president of product marketing, “is that they provide more access to the RF engineering community, which buys a lot of test and measurement technology. We believe our products will be able to deliver a lot of value to those customers.”

Source:http://www.statesman.com/business/national-instruments-buys-wireless-technology-companies-for-96-1493980.html

Get Adobe Flash playerPlugin by wpburn.com wordpress themes