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Wireless Logic, Teldat Provide Wireless Backup Service in the U.K.

By Anuradha Shukla September 14, 2009
Wireless Logic, a provider of Machine 2 Machine fixed IP and GPRS solutions and Teldat have reportedly partnered to provide U.K. businesses with a SIM-enabled wireless back-up service.
 
U.K. businesses, regardless of location and size, now have an option to stay connected by plugging Teldat’s SIM-enabled 3GE signal booster into their existing fixed line networks.
 
The companies are providing a back-up service to users who want to mitigate the risk of outage due to various reasons such as damaged lines, poor regional coverage or environmental issues.
 
Businesses now have the option to fully integrate a SIM-enabled wireless back-up solution into their existing networks. The technology lets companies integrate this solution without adding redundant equipment or replacing all the existing telecommunication gear.
 
Wireless Logic’s SIM technology will be embedded into Teldat’s 3GE wireless signal boosters, and when network failure occurs, these boosters will connect customers to Wireless Logic’s SIM-based network. The companies said this entire process will guarantee continued performance and reliability.
 
Typically, businesses in the U.K. experience network connectivity failure at least twice a year, said Philip Cole, sales director at Wireless Logic. This failure can cause huge loss to the companies who suffer from loss of productivity and revenue.
 
Cole said he hopes the partnership with Teldat will let businesses be protected by these outages, with little capital cost to their existing network infrastructure. This is important as network back-up solutions can be prohibitively expensive for many businesses – especially SMEs.
 
This solution has been designed to let businesses of all shapes and sizes cost efficiently stay connected when traditional networks fail or where the current network infrastructure is less established. 
 
“Teldat’s 3G Enabler allows business users of ISDN lines to convert their main line to 3G; in this way, by adding a 3G Enabler to the current router, 3G becomes main line access at a much more economical rate,” Cole said in a statement.

Anuradha Shukla is a contributing editor for IoTevolutionworld. To read more of Anuradha’s article, please visit her columnist page.

Edited by Amy Tierney
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