Published:
Networked Robotics Corporation Announces New Capability

Networked Robotics' engineers have developed a
palm-sized network hardware device that "learns" to talk to a wide range of
temperature-based scientific instruments by speaking the data communication
language specific to each instrument. The temperature data that is
collected through computer networks is used by biotech, medical, and food
companies to enhance FDA regulatory compliance, quality, and loss
prevention for their operations.
The latest capability allows Networked Robotics hardware in the field to
communicate directly to the Cryoplus brand of liquid nitrogen cryofreezers
from Thermo-Fisher. Cryofreezers are used to store stem cells and other
biologically important samples at temperatures lower than 100 degrees
Centigrade.
"All of Networked Robotics' current customer base has the option to
directly connect Cryoplus freezers to our Tempurity System through the same
Networked Robotics hardware units that are now in the field collecting
temperatures from refrigerators, incubators, and ultracold freezers," said
John Vedo, Assistant Vice President of Quality for Networked Robotics.
"Other temperature monitoring systems provide their customers temperature
sensors for devices that are already measuring temperature, so that they
are duplicating a function that is already provided by the instrument.
Networked Robotics hardware communicates directly to instruments, a
function that is enabled for new types of devices through net-upgradeable
firmware. Our hardware is essentially a scientific machine-language
converter. It talks to the equipment in its own language but standardizes
the language that is spoken on the network."
Networked Robotics also manufactures a line of digital sensors that
collects temperatures from rooms and some types of refrigerators and
freezers.
Cryoplus and Thermo-Fisher are registered trademarks of Thermo Fisher
Scientific Incorporated.
About Networked Robotics Corporation:
The founders of Networked Robotics worked for almost 20 years in the
automation of scientific processes for the pharmaceutical industry, and
since 1998 have concentrated on diverse network collection from scientific
devices. They engineered the first system to collect real-time raw data
from a wide-area network and have extensive experience in developing
FDA-compliant procedures. As a network device manufacturer and software
developer, Networked Robotics strives to establish a new benchmark in
scientific data collection. Networked Robotics was incorporated in 2004 and
is located in Evanston, Illinois.
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