News

Motorola Highlights New Products at IWCE 2008
22.05.2008
Motorola, Inc. (NYSE: MOT) today introduced several new products from its MOTOA4™, wireless broadband and professional two-way radio portfolios designed to improve communications for public safety, commercial and business customers. New products include the PM1200™ Mobile Two-Way Radio, CP110™ Portable Two-Way Radio, Motorola Bluetooth® Wireless Adapter, and the DigitalPatroller® DP-2 In-Vehicle Video System.
CP110 Portable Two-Way Radio and PM1200 Mobile Two-Way Radio allow users to enhance employee efficiency and productivity.
CP 110 has exceptional audio quality and a durable, rugged design enabling essential communication in loud workplace environments such as construction sites.
PM1200 provides local public safety, public works, utilities and transportation customers with a high quality solution.
“The Motorola CP110 and PM1200 were designed specifically to meet the rigorous demands of business users for whom two-way radios are a critical tool for day-to-day efficiency,” said Claudia Rodriguez, Motorola senior business manager, Professional-Commercial Radios. “These new portable and mobile two-way radios offer the functionality and capabilities in high demand by business users who need a cost-effective solution and coverage over a wide area.”
Motorola unveiled its first phase of wireless accessory solutions for two-way radios in the form of the Motorola Bluetooth Adapter. Users can quickly and easily pair this Bluetooth Adapter with the compatible Motorola Bluetooth Headset H300™.
The Motorola Bluetooth Adapter was designed with busy professionals in mind and has been certified and tested to work with the following Motorola portable two-way radios: PR1500™, HT1000™, XTS®1500, XTS®2500, and XTS®5000.
DigitalPatroller DP-2, manufactured by Integrian, is Motorola’s new in-vehicle video recording solution designed specifically for public safety, and it provides an important capability for law enforcement. DP-2 starts with a mobile DVR attached to a video camera in the police car. When triggered the DVR begins recording video from the camera and audio from the portable microphone that the officer wears. The audio and video are stored on the hard drives of the DVR. When the car returns to headquarters, video is retrieved and stored in a database. The database enables recorded video and audio to be called up later by type of incident, location or date. Having the video in digital format also makes it easy to search and easy to share with prosecutors and other agencies. DP-2 is rugged, reliable, and automatic, letting the officer concentrate on the job.
