Electronics company gives Australians design rights to beacon
Electronics design company, Tancher Corporation will give away free the design rights to its personal locator radio beacon to help Australians caught in emergencies.
The US and Russian-based company developed the tiny beacon as part of the Tancher Electronics Social Safety Initiative (TESSI), which encourages government and industry to make life-saving devices more accessible.
The beacon, which also doubles as a USB flash memory, is worn on the wrist and, when activated, emits a distress signal helping rescue teams to quickly locate the wearer.
Widespread access to such devices is critically important. Research shows people trapped under debris who are found within 30 minutes have a 50% chance of survival compared with less than 10% for those found after three hours.
Emergencies have a big impact in Australia with State Emergency Services (SES) units undertaking close to 600,000 hours responding to disasters and search and rescue operations in 2006.
Tancher president, Dr Anton Tyruin said the company was using TESSI to highlight the need for such devices to be made available to the public.
"This beacon will assist authorities locate missing bushwalkers or those trapped under debris caused by explosions, cave-ins and earthquakes," Tyruin said.
"The lack of availability of these devices is not due to large design and production expenses but because many businesses do not consider the safety industry commercially attractive.
"In order to rectify the situation we've decided to give away the design rights to our beacon in the hope that organisations or governments will produce the beacon and make it widely available."
Robotics facility to manufacture AI navigation systems
The facility will scale up the manufacturing of Advanced Navigation's AI navigation systems...
Precise positioning set to boost Australia's prosperity
Government investment in precise positioning infrastructure will have injected an additional half...
A/NZ signs $187.4m contract for SouthPAN satellite service
Every major industry across Australia and New Zealand is set to gain positioning and navigation...