![Robert G. Mechaley](https://cdn.zonebourse.com/static/resize/768/576//static/images/insiders/unknown.png)
Robert G. Mechaley
Chief Executive Officer at Mobilesphere Holdings LLC
Active connections
Name | Gender | Age | Linked companies | Collaboration |
---|---|---|---|---|
James R. Baker | M | - |
S5 Wireless, Inc.
![]() S5 Wireless, Inc. Aerospace & DefenseElectronic Technology In 2003 the founders of S5 Wireless, recognizing the limitations of existing location technologies, conceived of a novel RF approach to location and telemetry. The unconventional approach enjoys dramatic advantages across an array of performance metrics, offering high accuracy, low-latency, long battery life and excellent indoor coverage at a cost that enables rapid mass market adoption. Capable of serving standalone applications as well as fully integrated operation within existing data/voice applications, the S5 technology expands the possibilities of the LBS market. Historically, location and telemetry applications have faced four prominent barriers which have prevented mass market adoption of LBS. These barriers include: total cost, operational range, signal penetration and battery power. While existing wireless technologies meet a subset of these needs, a solution which simultaneously solves all requirements has proven elusive. This has resulted in applications which are only partially served by the chosen technology. Consequently, LBS market adoption has been constrained to a set of fragmented verticals rather than enjoying growth through mass market adoption driven by a horizontal technology enabler. This is no longer the case. Unlike conventional location and telemetry technologies, S5 meets all requirements to enable mass market adoption: Low Total Cost (hardware and subscription) Wide Area Coverage (metropolitan regions leading to global coverage) Excellent Indoor and Outdoor Coverage Long Battery Life (measured in years, not weeks) Low-latency and Rapid Updating (instant availability of present location) In function, S5’s tag is similar to an RFID tag, in that it can be easily embedded or attached to almost anything: products, people, pets, vehicles, etc. Further, with the integrated telemetry capability, the item can report “presence” information such as temperature, vibration, moisture or any other sensed aspect. However, unlike RFID systems, customers need not deploy, operate and maintain a multitude of expensive and proprietary tag readers. “Plug and Play” meets location and telemetry. | - |
Sy Prestwich | M | - |
S5 Wireless, Inc.
![]() S5 Wireless, Inc. Aerospace & DefenseElectronic Technology In 2003 the founders of S5 Wireless, recognizing the limitations of existing location technologies, conceived of a novel RF approach to location and telemetry. The unconventional approach enjoys dramatic advantages across an array of performance metrics, offering high accuracy, low-latency, long battery life and excellent indoor coverage at a cost that enables rapid mass market adoption. Capable of serving standalone applications as well as fully integrated operation within existing data/voice applications, the S5 technology expands the possibilities of the LBS market. Historically, location and telemetry applications have faced four prominent barriers which have prevented mass market adoption of LBS. These barriers include: total cost, operational range, signal penetration and battery power. While existing wireless technologies meet a subset of these needs, a solution which simultaneously solves all requirements has proven elusive. This has resulted in applications which are only partially served by the chosen technology. Consequently, LBS market adoption has been constrained to a set of fragmented verticals rather than enjoying growth through mass market adoption driven by a horizontal technology enabler. This is no longer the case. Unlike conventional location and telemetry technologies, S5 meets all requirements to enable mass market adoption: Low Total Cost (hardware and subscription) Wide Area Coverage (metropolitan regions leading to global coverage) Excellent Indoor and Outdoor Coverage Long Battery Life (measured in years, not weeks) Low-latency and Rapid Updating (instant availability of present location) In function, S5’s tag is similar to an RFID tag, in that it can be easily embedded or attached to almost anything: products, people, pets, vehicles, etc. Further, with the integrated telemetry capability, the item can report “presence” information such as temperature, vibration, moisture or any other sensed aspect. However, unlike RFID systems, customers need not deploy, operate and maintain a multitude of expensive and proprietary tag readers. “Plug and Play” meets location and telemetry. | 21 years |
Scott Bevan | M | - |
S5 Wireless, Inc.
![]() S5 Wireless, Inc. Aerospace & DefenseElectronic Technology In 2003 the founders of S5 Wireless, recognizing the limitations of existing location technologies, conceived of a novel RF approach to location and telemetry. The unconventional approach enjoys dramatic advantages across an array of performance metrics, offering high accuracy, low-latency, long battery life and excellent indoor coverage at a cost that enables rapid mass market adoption. Capable of serving standalone applications as well as fully integrated operation within existing data/voice applications, the S5 technology expands the possibilities of the LBS market. Historically, location and telemetry applications have faced four prominent barriers which have prevented mass market adoption of LBS. These barriers include: total cost, operational range, signal penetration and battery power. While existing wireless technologies meet a subset of these needs, a solution which simultaneously solves all requirements has proven elusive. This has resulted in applications which are only partially served by the chosen technology. Consequently, LBS market adoption has been constrained to a set of fragmented verticals rather than enjoying growth through mass market adoption driven by a horizontal technology enabler. This is no longer the case. Unlike conventional location and telemetry technologies, S5 meets all requirements to enable mass market adoption: Low Total Cost (hardware and subscription) Wide Area Coverage (metropolitan regions leading to global coverage) Excellent Indoor and Outdoor Coverage Long Battery Life (measured in years, not weeks) Low-latency and Rapid Updating (instant availability of present location) In function, S5’s tag is similar to an RFID tag, in that it can be easily embedded or attached to almost anything: products, people, pets, vehicles, etc. Further, with the integrated telemetry capability, the item can report “presence” information such as temperature, vibration, moisture or any other sensed aspect. However, unlike RFID systems, customers need not deploy, operate and maintain a multitude of expensive and proprietary tag readers. “Plug and Play” meets location and telemetry. | 21 years |
David Minster | M | - |
The American Radio Relay League
![]() The American Radio Relay League BroadcastingConsumer Services The American Radio Relay League provides radio broadcasting services. The non-profit company is based in Newington, CT. The company was founded in 1914. David Minster has been the CEO of the company since 2020. | 4 years |
Ari Fitzgerald | M | 61 |
Wireless History Foundation
| 1 years |
Phillip E. Temples | M | - |
The American Radio Relay League
![]() The American Radio Relay League BroadcastingConsumer Services The American Radio Relay League provides radio broadcasting services. The non-profit company is based in Newington, CT. The company was founded in 1914. David Minster has been the CEO of the company since 2020. | - |
Scott Yonally | M | - |
The American Radio Relay League
![]() The American Radio Relay League BroadcastingConsumer Services The American Radio Relay League provides radio broadcasting services. The non-profit company is based in Newington, CT. The company was founded in 1914. David Minster has been the CEO of the company since 2020. | - |
Ria Jairam | F | - |
The American Radio Relay League
![]() The American Radio Relay League BroadcastingConsumer Services The American Radio Relay League provides radio broadcasting services. The non-profit company is based in Newington, CT. The company was founded in 1914. David Minster has been the CEO of the company since 2020. | - |
William Hudzik | M | - |
The American Radio Relay League
![]() The American Radio Relay League BroadcastingConsumer Services The American Radio Relay League provides radio broadcasting services. The non-profit company is based in Newington, CT. The company was founded in 1914. David Minster has been the CEO of the company since 2020. | - |
Art Zygielbaum | M | - |
The American Radio Relay League
![]() The American Radio Relay League BroadcastingConsumer Services The American Radio Relay League provides radio broadcasting services. The non-profit company is based in Newington, CT. The company was founded in 1914. David Minster has been the CEO of the company since 2020. | - |
Dave Propper | M | - |
The American Radio Relay League
![]() The American Radio Relay League BroadcastingConsumer Services The American Radio Relay League provides radio broadcasting services. The non-profit company is based in Newington, CT. The company was founded in 1914. David Minster has been the CEO of the company since 2020. | - |
Fred Hopengarten | M | - |
The American Radio Relay League
![]() The American Radio Relay League BroadcastingConsumer Services The American Radio Relay League provides radio broadcasting services. The non-profit company is based in Newington, CT. The company was founded in 1914. David Minster has been the CEO of the company since 2020. | - |
Kristen McIntyre | F | - |
The American Radio Relay League
![]() The American Radio Relay League BroadcastingConsumer Services The American Radio Relay League provides radio broadcasting services. The non-profit company is based in Newington, CT. The company was founded in 1914. David Minster has been the CEO of the company since 2020. | - |
Mike Ritz | M | - |
The American Radio Relay League
![]() The American Radio Relay League BroadcastingConsumer Services The American Radio Relay League provides radio broadcasting services. The non-profit company is based in Newington, CT. The company was founded in 1914. David Minster has been the CEO of the company since 2020. | - |
Mark Tharp | M | - |
The American Radio Relay League
![]() The American Radio Relay League BroadcastingConsumer Services The American Radio Relay League provides radio broadcasting services. The non-profit company is based in Newington, CT. The company was founded in 1914. David Minster has been the CEO of the company since 2020. | - |
Ed Hudgens | M | - |
The American Radio Relay League
![]() The American Radio Relay League BroadcastingConsumer Services The American Radio Relay League provides radio broadcasting services. The non-profit company is based in Newington, CT. The company was founded in 1914. David Minster has been the CEO of the company since 2020. | - |
Bill Morine | M | - |
The American Radio Relay League
![]() The American Radio Relay League BroadcastingConsumer Services The American Radio Relay League provides radio broadcasting services. The non-profit company is based in Newington, CT. The company was founded in 1914. David Minster has been the CEO of the company since 2020. | - |
Dan Grady | M | - |
The American Radio Relay League
![]() The American Radio Relay League BroadcastingConsumer Services The American Radio Relay League provides radio broadcasting services. The non-profit company is based in Newington, CT. The company was founded in 1914. David Minster has been the CEO of the company since 2020. | - |
Mickey Baker | M | - |
The American Radio Relay League
![]() The American Radio Relay League BroadcastingConsumer Services The American Radio Relay League provides radio broadcasting services. The non-profit company is based in Newington, CT. The company was founded in 1914. David Minster has been the CEO of the company since 2020. | - |
Richard J. Norton | M | - |
The American Radio Relay League
![]() The American Radio Relay League BroadcastingConsumer Services The American Radio Relay League provides radio broadcasting services. The non-profit company is based in Newington, CT. The company was founded in 1914. David Minster has been the CEO of the company since 2020. | - |
Edward J. Stearns | M | - |
The American Radio Relay League
![]() The American Radio Relay League BroadcastingConsumer Services The American Radio Relay League provides radio broadcasting services. The non-profit company is based in Newington, CT. The company was founded in 1914. David Minster has been the CEO of the company since 2020. | - |
John Robert Stratton | M | - |
The American Radio Relay League
![]() The American Radio Relay League BroadcastingConsumer Services The American Radio Relay League provides radio broadcasting services. The non-profit company is based in Newington, CT. The company was founded in 1914. David Minster has been the CEO of the company since 2020. | - |
Dale Williams | M | - |
The American Radio Relay League
![]() The American Radio Relay League BroadcastingConsumer Services The American Radio Relay League provides radio broadcasting services. The non-profit company is based in Newington, CT. The company was founded in 1914. David Minster has been the CEO of the company since 2020. | - |
Bill Lippert | M | - |
The American Radio Relay League
![]() The American Radio Relay League BroadcastingConsumer Services The American Radio Relay League provides radio broadcasting services. The non-profit company is based in Newington, CT. The company was founded in 1914. David Minster has been the CEO of the company since 2020. | - |
David Norris | M | - |
The American Radio Relay League
![]() The American Radio Relay League BroadcastingConsumer Services The American Radio Relay League provides radio broadcasting services. The non-profit company is based in Newington, CT. The company was founded in 1914. David Minster has been the CEO of the company since 2020. | - |
David Scott Weber | M | 68 |
The American Radio Relay League
![]() The American Radio Relay League BroadcastingConsumer Services The American Radio Relay League provides radio broadcasting services. The non-profit company is based in Newington, CT. The company was founded in 1914. David Minster has been the CEO of the company since 2020. | - |
Kenneth A. Arneson | M | - |
S5 Wireless, Inc.
![]() S5 Wireless, Inc. Aerospace & DefenseElectronic Technology In 2003 the founders of S5 Wireless, recognizing the limitations of existing location technologies, conceived of a novel RF approach to location and telemetry. The unconventional approach enjoys dramatic advantages across an array of performance metrics, offering high accuracy, low-latency, long battery life and excellent indoor coverage at a cost that enables rapid mass market adoption. Capable of serving standalone applications as well as fully integrated operation within existing data/voice applications, the S5 technology expands the possibilities of the LBS market. Historically, location and telemetry applications have faced four prominent barriers which have prevented mass market adoption of LBS. These barriers include: total cost, operational range, signal penetration and battery power. While existing wireless technologies meet a subset of these needs, a solution which simultaneously solves all requirements has proven elusive. This has resulted in applications which are only partially served by the chosen technology. Consequently, LBS market adoption has been constrained to a set of fragmented verticals rather than enjoying growth through mass market adoption driven by a horizontal technology enabler. This is no longer the case. Unlike conventional location and telemetry technologies, S5 meets all requirements to enable mass market adoption: Low Total Cost (hardware and subscription) Wide Area Coverage (metropolitan regions leading to global coverage) Excellent Indoor and Outdoor Coverage Long Battery Life (measured in years, not weeks) Low-latency and Rapid Updating (instant availability of present location) In function, S5’s tag is similar to an RFID tag, in that it can be easily embedded or attached to almost anything: products, people, pets, vehicles, etc. Further, with the integrated telemetry capability, the item can report “presence” information such as temperature, vibration, moisture or any other sensed aspect. However, unlike RFID systems, customers need not deploy, operate and maintain a multitude of expensive and proprietary tag readers. “Plug and Play” meets location and telemetry. | - |
Paul Ahlstrom | M | - |
S5 Wireless, Inc.
![]() S5 Wireless, Inc. Aerospace & DefenseElectronic Technology In 2003 the founders of S5 Wireless, recognizing the limitations of existing location technologies, conceived of a novel RF approach to location and telemetry. The unconventional approach enjoys dramatic advantages across an array of performance metrics, offering high accuracy, low-latency, long battery life and excellent indoor coverage at a cost that enables rapid mass market adoption. Capable of serving standalone applications as well as fully integrated operation within existing data/voice applications, the S5 technology expands the possibilities of the LBS market. Historically, location and telemetry applications have faced four prominent barriers which have prevented mass market adoption of LBS. These barriers include: total cost, operational range, signal penetration and battery power. While existing wireless technologies meet a subset of these needs, a solution which simultaneously solves all requirements has proven elusive. This has resulted in applications which are only partially served by the chosen technology. Consequently, LBS market adoption has been constrained to a set of fragmented verticals rather than enjoying growth through mass market adoption driven by a horizontal technology enabler. This is no longer the case. Unlike conventional location and telemetry technologies, S5 meets all requirements to enable mass market adoption: Low Total Cost (hardware and subscription) Wide Area Coverage (metropolitan regions leading to global coverage) Excellent Indoor and Outdoor Coverage Long Battery Life (measured in years, not weeks) Low-latency and Rapid Updating (instant availability of present location) In function, S5’s tag is similar to an RFID tag, in that it can be easily embedded or attached to almost anything: products, people, pets, vehicles, etc. Further, with the integrated telemetry capability, the item can report “presence” information such as temperature, vibration, moisture or any other sensed aspect. However, unlike RFID systems, customers need not deploy, operate and maintain a multitude of expensive and proprietary tag readers. “Plug and Play” meets location and telemetry. | - |
Eliot Weitz | M | - |
S5 Wireless, Inc.
![]() S5 Wireless, Inc. Aerospace & DefenseElectronic Technology In 2003 the founders of S5 Wireless, recognizing the limitations of existing location technologies, conceived of a novel RF approach to location and telemetry. The unconventional approach enjoys dramatic advantages across an array of performance metrics, offering high accuracy, low-latency, long battery life and excellent indoor coverage at a cost that enables rapid mass market adoption. Capable of serving standalone applications as well as fully integrated operation within existing data/voice applications, the S5 technology expands the possibilities of the LBS market. Historically, location and telemetry applications have faced four prominent barriers which have prevented mass market adoption of LBS. These barriers include: total cost, operational range, signal penetration and battery power. While existing wireless technologies meet a subset of these needs, a solution which simultaneously solves all requirements has proven elusive. This has resulted in applications which are only partially served by the chosen technology. Consequently, LBS market adoption has been constrained to a set of fragmented verticals rather than enjoying growth through mass market adoption driven by a horizontal technology enabler. This is no longer the case. Unlike conventional location and telemetry technologies, S5 meets all requirements to enable mass market adoption: Low Total Cost (hardware and subscription) Wide Area Coverage (metropolitan regions leading to global coverage) Excellent Indoor and Outdoor Coverage Long Battery Life (measured in years, not weeks) Low-latency and Rapid Updating (instant availability of present location) In function, S5’s tag is similar to an RFID tag, in that it can be easily embedded or attached to almost anything: products, people, pets, vehicles, etc. Further, with the integrated telemetry capability, the item can report “presence” information such as temperature, vibration, moisture or any other sensed aspect. However, unlike RFID systems, customers need not deploy, operate and maintain a multitude of expensive and proprietary tag readers. “Plug and Play” meets location and telemetry. | - |
Steven Chacko | M | - |
S5 Wireless, Inc.
![]() S5 Wireless, Inc. Aerospace & DefenseElectronic Technology In 2003 the founders of S5 Wireless, recognizing the limitations of existing location technologies, conceived of a novel RF approach to location and telemetry. The unconventional approach enjoys dramatic advantages across an array of performance metrics, offering high accuracy, low-latency, long battery life and excellent indoor coverage at a cost that enables rapid mass market adoption. Capable of serving standalone applications as well as fully integrated operation within existing data/voice applications, the S5 technology expands the possibilities of the LBS market. Historically, location and telemetry applications have faced four prominent barriers which have prevented mass market adoption of LBS. These barriers include: total cost, operational range, signal penetration and battery power. While existing wireless technologies meet a subset of these needs, a solution which simultaneously solves all requirements has proven elusive. This has resulted in applications which are only partially served by the chosen technology. Consequently, LBS market adoption has been constrained to a set of fragmented verticals rather than enjoying growth through mass market adoption driven by a horizontal technology enabler. This is no longer the case. Unlike conventional location and telemetry technologies, S5 meets all requirements to enable mass market adoption: Low Total Cost (hardware and subscription) Wide Area Coverage (metropolitan regions leading to global coverage) Excellent Indoor and Outdoor Coverage Long Battery Life (measured in years, not weeks) Low-latency and Rapid Updating (instant availability of present location) In function, S5’s tag is similar to an RFID tag, in that it can be easily embedded or attached to almost anything: products, people, pets, vehicles, etc. Further, with the integrated telemetry capability, the item can report “presence” information such as temperature, vibration, moisture or any other sensed aspect. However, unlike RFID systems, customers need not deploy, operate and maintain a multitude of expensive and proprietary tag readers. “Plug and Play” meets location and telemetry. | - |
Keith Pugmire | M | - |
S5 Wireless, Inc.
![]() S5 Wireless, Inc. Aerospace & DefenseElectronic Technology In 2003 the founders of S5 Wireless, recognizing the limitations of existing location technologies, conceived of a novel RF approach to location and telemetry. The unconventional approach enjoys dramatic advantages across an array of performance metrics, offering high accuracy, low-latency, long battery life and excellent indoor coverage at a cost that enables rapid mass market adoption. Capable of serving standalone applications as well as fully integrated operation within existing data/voice applications, the S5 technology expands the possibilities of the LBS market. Historically, location and telemetry applications have faced four prominent barriers which have prevented mass market adoption of LBS. These barriers include: total cost, operational range, signal penetration and battery power. While existing wireless technologies meet a subset of these needs, a solution which simultaneously solves all requirements has proven elusive. This has resulted in applications which are only partially served by the chosen technology. Consequently, LBS market adoption has been constrained to a set of fragmented verticals rather than enjoying growth through mass market adoption driven by a horizontal technology enabler. This is no longer the case. Unlike conventional location and telemetry technologies, S5 meets all requirements to enable mass market adoption: Low Total Cost (hardware and subscription) Wide Area Coverage (metropolitan regions leading to global coverage) Excellent Indoor and Outdoor Coverage Long Battery Life (measured in years, not weeks) Low-latency and Rapid Updating (instant availability of present location) In function, S5’s tag is similar to an RFID tag, in that it can be easily embedded or attached to almost anything: products, people, pets, vehicles, etc. Further, with the integrated telemetry capability, the item can report “presence” information such as temperature, vibration, moisture or any other sensed aspect. However, unlike RFID systems, customers need not deploy, operate and maintain a multitude of expensive and proprietary tag readers. “Plug and Play” meets location and telemetry. | - |
George W. Hippisley | M | 82 |
The American Radio Relay League
![]() The American Radio Relay League BroadcastingConsumer Services The American Radio Relay League provides radio broadcasting services. The non-profit company is based in Newington, CT. The company was founded in 1914. David Minster has been the CEO of the company since 2020. | - |
Thomas J. Gallagher | M | - |
The American Radio Relay League
![]() The American Radio Relay League BroadcastingConsumer Services The American Radio Relay League provides radio broadcasting services. The non-profit company is based in Newington, CT. The company was founded in 1914. David Minster has been the CEO of the company since 2020. | 8 years |
Jeff Ryan | M | 56 |
The American Radio Relay League
![]() The American Radio Relay League BroadcastingConsumer Services The American Radio Relay League provides radio broadcasting services. The non-profit company is based in Newington, CT. The company was founded in 1914. David Minster has been the CEO of the company since 2020. | - |
Lynn Nelson | M | - |
The American Radio Relay League
![]() The American Radio Relay League BroadcastingConsumer Services The American Radio Relay League provides radio broadcasting services. The non-profit company is based in Newington, CT. The company was founded in 1914. David Minster has been the CEO of the company since 2020. | - |
Bryan Darr | M | - |
Wireless History Foundation
| 1 years |
James Schilling | M | - |
The American Radio Relay League
![]() The American Radio Relay League BroadcastingConsumer Services The American Radio Relay League provides radio broadcasting services. The non-profit company is based in Newington, CT. The company was founded in 1914. David Minster has been the CEO of the company since 2020. | - |
Rick Roderick | M | - |
The American Radio Relay League
![]() The American Radio Relay League BroadcastingConsumer Services The American Radio Relay League provides radio broadcasting services. The non-profit company is based in Newington, CT. The company was founded in 1914. David Minster has been the CEO of the company since 2020. | - |
Tom Abernethy | M | - |
The American Radio Relay League
![]() The American Radio Relay League BroadcastingConsumer Services The American Radio Relay League provides radio broadcasting services. The non-profit company is based in Newington, CT. The company was founded in 1914. David Minster has been the CEO of the company since 2020. | - |
Bob Famiglio | M | - |
The American Radio Relay League
![]() The American Radio Relay League BroadcastingConsumer Services The American Radio Relay League provides radio broadcasting services. The non-profit company is based in Newington, CT. The company was founded in 1914. David Minster has been the CEO of the company since 2020. | - |
Kermit Carlson | M | - |
The American Radio Relay League
![]() The American Radio Relay League BroadcastingConsumer Services The American Radio Relay League provides radio broadcasting services. The non-profit company is based in Newington, CT. The company was founded in 1914. David Minster has been the CEO of the company since 2020. | - |
Carl Luetzelschwab | M | - |
The American Radio Relay League
![]() The American Radio Relay League BroadcastingConsumer Services The American Radio Relay League provides radio broadcasting services. The non-profit company is based in Newington, CT. The company was founded in 1914. David Minster has been the CEO of the company since 2020. | - |
Sean F. Forrester | M | 59 |
The American Radio Relay League
![]() The American Radio Relay League BroadcastingConsumer Services The American Radio Relay League provides radio broadcasting services. The non-profit company is based in Newington, CT. The company was founded in 1914. David Minster has been the CEO of the company since 2020. | - |
Lee H. Cooper | M | - |
The American Radio Relay League
![]() The American Radio Relay League BroadcastingConsumer Services The American Radio Relay League provides radio broadcasting services. The non-profit company is based in Newington, CT. The company was founded in 1914. David Minster has been the CEO of the company since 2020. | - |
Connections Chart
Multi-company connection
Statistics
Country | Connections | % of total |
---|---|---|
United States | 44 | 100.00% |
Age of Connections
Active
Past
Male
Female
Members of the board
Executives
Origin of connections
- Stock Market
- Insiders
- Robert G. Mechaley
- Personal Network