
Discover how the combination of intelligence analysis, lead generation, agency collaboration, and communications integration can help you uncover issues faster and take action sooner in PoliceMag.com's exclusive webinar June 17 at 2pm Eastern.
Read More →Tait Communications has released Tait Enable, a suite of management tools and middleware that offers a solution for network and fleet management.
Read More →Lance Clark, president and CEO of Spillman Technologies, Inc., was recently recognized as a “CEO of the Year” by Utah Business magazine alongside seven other honorees at a banquet held in their honor.
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Spillman Technologies’ tightly integrated intelligence-led policing tools like map-based analytics, extensive searching capabilities, and community crime maps enable officers to analyze agency data in meaningful ways.
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FINDAR enables police to quickly locate metallic and non-metallic buried evidence for further investigation. Officers are able to find weapons, caches of drugs or money, clandestine graves, hidden bunkers, or soil disturbances.
Read More →JusticeTech enables the justice community -- courts, prosecutors, law enforcement, and other related agencies -- to share a common electronic case file to create a digital "paper-on-demand" environment where paper is no longer the norm.
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Public safety computing tools are now available for desktops, laptops, and mobile devices. The following is a look at some of the products that were released before the IACP conference.
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Sensors & Software's forensics-focused Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR) system, the Findar, enables police to locate subsurface targets in real time. The system enables the discovery of buried evidence.
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There's the stuff that you would expect to see at any law enforcement exposition and there's the stuff that seems to have dropped out of a science fiction movie. And all of it has the potential to be important to what you do in contemporary policing.
Read More →Three computer savvy inmates serving time at the Joseph Harp Correctional Center in Lexington, Okla., have created a data collection program that may save the state millions of dollars, say three state representatives.
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