|
News & Issues -
Industry Innovations
|
Megladon Manufacturing Group answered the request of the CATV industry today by providing bend insensitive fiber for node tail applications. Maximizing the number of customers served by each node has reduced the available space inside the node for fiber management. The result is attenuation and potential intermittent failures which are seen by customers as outages. |
|
Read more...
|
|
|
News & Issues -
Industry Innovations
|
|
Written by Ihab Abu-Hakima
|
|
Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center installs a 900-access-point WLAN to mobilize electronic patient charting and to gain valuable time savings. Hardwired communications and computing devices are no longer the preferred tools of the trade for doctors and nurses at Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center (WFUBMC) in Winston-Salem, N.C. That is because the academic health system has gone wireless. The 1,300-bed facility–comprising North Carolina Baptist Hospital, Wake Forest University School of Medicine and Brenner Children’s Hospital–concluded that a campus-wide wireless network would give medical staff faster and easier access to patient records via its electronic medical records (EMR) system. |
|
Read more...
|
|
News & Issues -
Industry Innovations
|
|
First installed in the mid-1980s by British Telecom for use in outside-plant (OSP) applications, blown optical fiber is a system in which fiber is blown into a network of microduct tubes via an air-delivery system of compressed air or nitrogen. While blown fiber still represents a very small percentage of the premises marketplace, and critics continue to question the system's fiber protection and cost savings, acceptance is being fueled by new standards and the buy-in of some key customers. Hence vendors continue to enhance their systems with new products and features, and many claim growth in specific market segments. |
|
Read more...
|
|
|
News & Issues -
Industry Innovations
|
|
Megladon Manufacturing Group took a monumental step today for the CATV market by adapting the HLC process to angle polished connectors. Angle polished connectors have been used for years in high speed video transport applications due to inherent low reflection characteristics. The fragile nature of fiber mating surfaces, however, has continued to plague an industry that is more competitive than ever. With the growing video on demand and streaming video content on the web, a need arises for high quality fiber optic products capable of withstanding this trend. Industry leaders and providers are having to transition into a more competent network infrastructure to conform to the now industry standard of high performance fiber optic networks. |
|
Read more...
|
|
News & Issues -
Industry Innovations
|
|
SensorTran Senior Optical Engineer endorses Megladon’s E2000 HLC® SCRATCHGUARD™ Patch Cords. SensorTran and Megladon are both Austin, Texas based companies and have collaborated to bring high-quality products to the fiber optic marketplace. Since Megladon Manufacturing released its new E2000 HLC SCRATCHGUARD Patch Cord in April of this year, they have received outstanding feedback from the market. By pairing their existing HLC process technology with their E2000 connectors, this product provides a mating surface that is dust and scratch resistant, exhibiting signal losses below industry standards. |
|
Read more...
|
|
|
|
|
<< Start < Prev 1 2 3 4 5 Next > End >>
|
|
Page 1 of 5 |