1 00:00:08,966 --> 00:00:11,866 Walter: What we've seen with datacasting technology 2 00:00:11,866 --> 00:00:17,100 is the ability to push really critical information out to our first responders, 3 00:00:17,100 --> 00:00:20,533 to some of our ancillary agencies, some of our departments 4 00:00:20,533 --> 00:00:25,333 without having to tie up the network resources that we've had to before. 5 00:00:25,333 --> 00:00:27,533 Hanagriff: And right now I'm displaying 6 00:00:27,533 --> 00:00:31,166 our public safety video network on this system, 7 00:00:31,166 --> 00:00:34,066 and this is typically the control interface 8 00:00:34,066 --> 00:00:37,733 that the technical officer would be using. 9 00:00:37,733 --> 00:00:42,600 And what this is doing is datacasting is replicating this screen 10 00:00:42,600 --> 00:00:46,366 and pushing it over a television broadcasting network 11 00:00:46,366 --> 00:00:50,033 to responders in the field that otherwise would not have this information. 12 00:00:50,033 --> 00:00:56,399 Flanagan: We can have multiple locations that we can gather intel from, 13 00:00:56,399 --> 00:00:59,333 and that gives us the capabilities for doing, 14 00:00:59,333 --> 00:01:02,066 the controlling of the locations points 15 00:01:02,066 --> 00:01:05,666 at one position with one person at a keyboard. 16 00:01:05,666 --> 00:01:08,133 Cook: Essentially whenever we have a team like a 17 00:01:08,133 --> 00:01:11,166 USAR, an urban search and rescue team, or something like that 18 00:01:11,166 --> 00:01:13,200 deployed anywhere in the country, 19 00:01:13,200 --> 00:01:17,500 as long as they have LTE service or Wifi or something like that 20 00:01:17,500 --> 00:01:20,233 where they can actually send video back, 21 00:01:20,233 --> 00:01:22,933 we can then datacast it through the rest of the department. 22 00:01:22,933 --> 00:01:25,366 We can actually keep tabs on our members 23 00:01:25,366 --> 00:01:30,400 or our crews anywhere, anywhere else they are.