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DALLAS, Jan. 26, 2021 /PRNewswire/
What s the news? FirstNet, Built with AT&T – America s public safety network – is driving innovation in lifesaving, public safety technology. Now, first responders have access to 4 new mission-driven solutions exclusively available to all FirstNet subscribers: FirstNet® MegaRange™, Z-Axis, FirstNet Compact Rapid Deployables™ and Land-Mobile-Radio (LMR) interoperability for FirstNet Push-to-Talk (PTT). And, for the 3
rd consecutive year, Frost & Sullivan recognizes AT&T for driving visionary innovation in public safety by introducing smart solutions that cater to the evolving demands of first responders.
FirstNet
MegaRange
™: Following 3GPP and FCC standards, FirstNet is the only network where public safety can take advantage of the highest power class signaling available in the U.S. with FirstNet MegaRange™, the high-power user equipment (HPUE) solution exclusively available on Band 14. For rural, remo
Nashville bombing reveals US communication networks vulnerability; officials demand answers on how to secure them Meghan Mangrum and Donovan Slack, USA TODAY NETWORK
Police bodycam video shows moments after bomb went off in Nashville
Replay Video UP NEXT
NASHVILLE, Tenn. – Four days after the bombing downtown on Christmas Day crippled cell service, internet and even tools for law enforcement across a multistate region, residents in White County, Tennessee, struggled to get through to the emergency communication center.
Though the center s landlines worked and officials pushed out a nonemergency number via social media, the rural county s 911 Emergency Director Suzi Haston said she was shocked wireless services were still out after the bombing damaged an AT&T building more than 90 miles away.
Nashville bombing, AT&T: How can communication networks be secured? jsonline.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from jsonline.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Nashville bombing reveals US communication networks vulnerability; officials demand answers on how to secure them Meghan Mangrum and Donovan Slack, USA TODAY NETWORK
Police bodycam video shows moments after bomb went off in Nashville
Replay Video UP NEXT
NASHVILLE, Tenn. – Four days after the bombing downtown on Christmas Day crippled cell service, internet and even tools for law enforcement across a multistate region, residents in White County, Tennessee, struggled to get through to the emergency communication center.
Though the center s landlines worked and officials pushed out a nonemergency number via social media, the rural county s 911 Emergency Director Suzi Haston said she was shocked wireless services were still out after the bombing damaged an AT&T building more than 90 miles away.