Frequently asked questions

What is PABLO?

PABLO is an employee safety support system.
Safety monitoring - first of all. PABLO is a solution that makes it possible to maintain constant voice communication with a worker working alone or to monitor his or her awareness, and in the event of an accident, the system sounds an alarm and indicates the location of the worker requiring assistance.

Secondly, process efficiency - The system gives management, or technical staff, the ability to intervene instantly in the event of failures or incidents that require a rapid response from staff on site. Integration with the Zenitel intercom system provides a comprehensive, automated and, above all, mobile industrial communication system.

Thirdly, critical communications. The system is independent of other telecommunications media - mobile telephony, wired telephony or computer network transmission. PABLO is not influenced by vendor service windows and can be configured for mains-independent operation.

For whom is PABLO intended?

The PABLO System is designed for the industrial customer, whether small, medium or large, corporate. Most often, the decision to purchase the System reflects the level of maturity of the company's security and process management. PABLO is also available in a Light version (without operator console and server) for small or mobile businesses requiring short-term security for employees in hazardous areas.

How can we reduce costs with PABLO?

We can do this on two levels: 
- Increase efficiency by optimising traffic and employee management.
- The efficiency of staff, the distribution of resources or the flexible routing of staff from one area to another based on the availability and location of teams is undoubtedly an advantage of the System.

Improve worker safety - safeguarding and preventing accidents and enabling rapid intervention once an accident has occurred.  

In the latter case, preventing even the smallest incident ending in injury has the effect of avoiding production stoppages, which can sometimes be a great loss for the company.

Will we still have the PABLO system and voice communication in the event of an electrical grid failure?

Yes, we even use a phrase such as critical communications, i.e. communications in emergency, critical, unexpected cases. We emphasise the fact that the system is independent of any other infrastructure.

How does the system work?

The base of the system is the independent radio infrastructure I mentioned earlier. That is, the possibility of voice communication between employees using radios. The radios operate on dedicated, protected frequencies that are leased from the electronic communications authority. This is a frequency that is allocated to a particular user. It is protected by law. This is the basis for ensuring critical communications between employees. 

The second layer enables worker location. Both in the open by GPS, and in all kinds of enclosed objects, where the GPS signal is already degraded and location cannot be based on it, by means of radio tags, which are an additional element of this infrastructure.

The third element is the ability to generate and identify alarms that are triggered when an incident occurs to the user. This can be triggered from a 'panic' button, from a fall sensor or from what is known as a 'standby', i.e. by deliberately forcing the user to react to the radio.

Who are PABLO's customers?

Our customers are mainly production plants, which very often have departments within their structures that require continuous movement, such as in the case of glassworks. There are also departments with areas that are potentially dangerous for the employee when he or she performs his or her tasks there.
 
Our customers are large manufacturing companies operating in Poland, but they are also multinationals, something we are proud of. These include the brewing, tobacco, furniture and steel industries.

Who will benefit from the PABLO system?

The PABLO system will certainly benefit those who directly manage the technical, maintenance team in production facilities. As well as those responsible for health and safety in the company. The former can see in real time how and where personnel are working and whether they are safe. They also have the opportunity to contact and order certain things and communicate directly.

The latter are likely to make more use of the statistics generated by the System, where they can see what areas staff are working in, what incidents have occurred or the time elapsed between the incident and the arrival of assistance.