Servato will be at the MTA Annual Convention & Showcase today along with our partners, Tel Rep Marketing. Learn more about network resiliency, backup power automation, and CapEx savings by stopping by our booth. We look forward to meeting you!
[…]Once again Servato is returning to one our our favorite cities and states, Charleston, SC. We're excited to be expanding to more companies and to be helping prevent power-related outages on the coast. Looking forward to next week in Charleston!
[…]Servato will be at the ITA's Showcase Northwest today along with our partners, Tel Rep Marketing. Learn more about network resiliency, backup power automation, and CapEx savings by stopping by our booth. We look forward to meeting you!
[…]This week is the annual Meeting and Expo of the Iowa Communications Alliance. Servato will be exhibiting with our great partners, Tel Rep Marketing, and we're excited to announce that Business Development Manager Alex Rawitz will be participating in a panel on Disaster Recovery and preparedness. Come learn why backup power power maintenance is easy to automate and improve.
[…]Servato will be at the GTA's Annual Vendor Showcase today along with our partners, ProCom Sales. Learn more about network resiliency, backup power automation, and CapEx savings by stopping by our booth in the Show Vehicles section. We look forward to meeting you!
[…]Servato will be at the LTA's Annual Showcase and Convention today along with our partners, ProCom Sales. Come by and meet the team that helps improve resiliency and reliability in the rural telecom industry.
[…]Using Servato Battery Management Technology, United is embracing a new standard for how rural broadband can ensure that the Internet is Always On
[…]In this three-part article series, Andrew Burger of Energy Central outlines the systematic risk that an increasingly unreliable energy grid poses to the telecom industry and the way Americans communicate, do business, and protect against crises. Andrew speaks with Servato CEO Chris Mangum on the subject:
[…]What did America look like at the turn of the 20th Century? It was an age of advancement, and the most important feature was the emerging middle class, which fueled the labor supply for the Industrial Revolution creating new markets in military goods, manufacturing, travel, and leisure. Teddy Roosevelt signed the Antiquities Act in 1906, helping to protect National Landmarks. Technological advances included the phonograph, light bulb, machine gun, air conditioning, airplanes, and drip brew coffee. Progress was on the march, but it was leaving populations behind. Children worked arduous jobs earning a couple of dollars a day if they were lucky. Women could still not vote.
[…]The first Tradeshow/Expo on Servato's calendar, and we are attending with our great partners, ProCom Sales. Stop by their booth to learn more about protecting backup batteries and improving network resiliency.
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