Power plant operators and railway dispatchers use pagers as a fallback communication layer. If the IP network goes down due to a cyber attack (ransomware), the Swissphone pager network—running on analog RF—remains functional.
The core argument for the PSW900 lies in its radio frequency (RF) performance. Smartphones rely on congested cellular networks that can fail during natural disasters or large-scale emergencies. The PSW900 operates on dedicated paging networks (POCSAG, FLEX), which use lower frequencies that penetrate buildings and underground garages far better than LTE or 5G. When a hospital’s Wi-Fi crashes or a city’s cell towers are overloaded, the Swissphone’s single-minded purpose—to receive an alert—remains uncompromised. swissphone psw900 idea top
Furthermore, the device excels in audio clarity. The PSW900 features a powerful vibrator, a bright LED flash, and a speaker capable of producing an 85+ dB alert tone. In a noisy factory floor or a rain-lashed tarmac, the difference between a missed notification and a life-saving alert is pure decibel power. The "Idea Top" interface allows users to pre-set multiple profiles: a silent vibration for a library, a piercing siren for a fire station, or a custom melody for a specific alert type. This is not customization for entertainment; it is contextual awareness for survival. Power plant operators and railway dispatchers use pagers
The PSW900 uses a standard AA battery or a rechargeable NiMH battery pack (with a dedicated charging cradle). The core argument for the PSW900 lies in
The PSW900 idea top is purpose-built for specific sectors where failure is not an option:
Режим работы:
пн-пт: 11:00–21:00
сб-вс и праздники: 11:00–19:00
Москва,
ул. Льва Толстого, дом 23/7c3, п. 3, 1 эт.
Режим работы:
пн-пт: 11:00–21:00
сб-вс и праздники: 11:00–20:00
Санкт-Петербург,
ул. Миргородская, д. 20