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Emergency Digital Information Service (EDIS) is a wireless datacast based emergency and disaster information service operated by the State of California Governor's Office of Emergency Services. In operation since 1990, the system was upgraded in 1999 to support image and sound capabilities via satellite broadcast. [ 1 ]
Gracenote, Inc. is a company and service that provides music, video, and sports metadata and automatic content recognition (ACR) technologies to entertainment services and companies worldwide. [3] Formerly CDDB (" Compact Disc Data Base "), Gracenote maintains and licenses an Internet-accessible database containing information about the ...
The agency is also the primary public transit provider for the city of Los Angeles, the second largest city in the United States, providing the bulk of such services. even though the city's own Los Angeles Department of Transportation LADOT operates a smaller bus only public transit system of its own called DASH within the MTA service area in ...
Sonic offers a number of services including: 10 Gigabit Fiber – residential product. [1] Sonic's XGS-PON implementation uses many components of their Gigabit Fiber offering: they use a transition box to terminate their fiber between their drop cable and customers', use of an ONT [15] [16] and a variety of residential gateways. [17]
Years in the making, L.A. County's Community Broadband Network is set to launch this year in East L.A., South L.A. and Boyle Heights.
We reached out to Fortune 500 companies based in Los Angeles County or with a significant number of regional employees to learn more about how they’re showing up for their workers. Here's what ...
LEEDIR was developed by CitizenGlobal in collaboration with the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department and Amazon Web Services for use as a platform that acts as a central repository for eyewitnesses to send photos/videos during a terrorist event or natural disaster. The strategy is a public safety/private sector crowdsourcing collaboration. [4]
The Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act (CALEA), also known as the "Digital Telephony Act," is a United States wiretapping law passed in 1994, during the presidency of Bill Clinton (Pub. L. No. 103-414, 108 Stat. 4279, codified at 47 USC 1001–1010).