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Weapons detection systems
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Evolv adds Twins, Astros, Phillies and Lightning (and Red Sox) to customer list for walk-through security scanners
As part of its latest quarterly financial announcement, walk-through weapons detection system provider Evolv said it had added the Minnesota Twins, the Houston Astros, the Philadelphia Phillies and the Tampa Bay Lightning as customers, adding to a breakout year where the company more than doubled its revenue. The publicly traded (NASDAQ: EVLV) Evolv, which has rapidly added sports stadium customers...News
Madison Square Garden’s investment arm acquires big chunk of security-scanning provider Xtract One
Weapons detection technology provider Xtract One announced a fund-raising agreement with the investment arm of Madison Square Garden Sports Corp. under which MSG Sports may eventually own as much as 28 percent of Xtract One's stock. The two-part deal includes an initial investment of $6.3 million by the venture-funding arm of MSG Sports, with a follow-on investment of $3.7 million...News
New Report: SoFi Stadium’s network sees 53 petabytes of traffic at Super Bowl 56
Stadium Tech Report is pleased to announce our Spring 2022 issue, with a report on the mind-blowing 53 petabytes of network data used at Super Bowl 56 on SoFi Stadium's converged IP network. Also in this issue you will find a feature profile of the new walk-through weapons detection systems being deployed at sports venues, along with a story about...Feature
Safer, faster: New weapons-detection technology is changing the speed of stadium entry
Put your keys back in your pocket. Keep your cell phone there, too. Keep your hands to your side and walk forward at a normal pace. Congratulations, you've perfected the new way to enter stadiums. Using newer forms of radio-wave image detection or magnetic scanning, the claim for most of these new systems is that they can "see" weapons of...Editorial