- Frequentis is replacing existing NASA Voice Conferencing Systems at JSC with the next-generation Voice over IP (VoIP) Conferencing System
- Using the Frequentis VoIP system, JSC retains the existing operator control keysets providing significant familiarity, material cost savings, and operator re-training
After two years of preparation and collaboration with NASA and KBR through the Mission Systems Operations Contract (MSOC), NASA’s Johnson Space Center awarded Frequentis USA a contract to replace the existing Mission Operations Voice Enhancement (MOVE) systems with a technology refresh.
NASA’s Voice Conferencing System (VCS)
Frequentis will replace the current version of NASA’s Voice Conferencing System (VCS), delivered in 2008, with the latest telecommunication and teleconferencing technology, including VoIP communication lines and interfaces to operator keysets. The project supports the identical, critical functionality for mission voice within NASA, for all crewed and uncrewed space missions.
Frequentis USA has worked with NASA on mission-critical voice communication for more than 16 years. As part of the MOVE program, in 2007 Frequentis delivered more than 18 VCS to NASA sites.
“We are extremely pleased to provide this VCS upgrade for Johnson Space Center. Frequentis hopes this will be a model for other NASA Mission Control Centers that would like to evolve to VoIP via a technical refresh. Our user-friendly keysets have already been used by NASA for human spaceflight operations and we are able to retain those for the operators, making this a cost-effective and seamless transition to new technology,” says Dieter Eier, President, Frequentis USA.
All NASA VCS systems are assembled in and supported from the Frequentis USA factory in Columbia, Maryland. This enables global installation and support for sites ranging from Kennedy Space Center in Florida to the Deep Space Communication Complex in Canberra, Australia.