

MIR3 in™LocalAlert™ Intelligent Notification™ (IN) replaces manual phone trees and cumbersome paging systems with a high-speed, carrier-grade platform that automatically delivers messages to recipients on whatever communication device they have at hand. The result is guaranteed, timely and managed emergency and non-emergency communications.
inLocalAlert is a proven communication infrastructure that allows designated individuals to send a notification via the Internet or by phone simultaneously to tens of thousands of users over a carrier-grade high-speed platform.
The notification is delivered to each recipient’s primary communication device (based on time of day and other factors). If a person doesn’t respond, the message is delivered to the recipient’s secondary device until a response is received.
When received, the recipient chooses from pre-defined options that initiate actions (call into a conference line) or resolves problems (indicate if the person is available for immediate mobilization to an emergency site). Additionally, the system keeps an audit trail to provide detailed historical and real-time reports.
When a governmental organization needs to communicate critical events in a guaranteed, timely and managed fashion, inLocalAlert IN is the proven answer. As listed below, businesses and government agencies alike use inLocalAlert to streamline and manage critical communication activities and information flow.

inLocalAlert is a proven communication infrastructure that allows designated individuals to send a notification via the Internet or by phone simultaneously to tens of thousands of users over a carrier-grade high-speed platform.

Experience the ease of use and the speed of the industry's first global emergency notification system with this private and no-obligation web launched trial.

November 4, 2009
MIR3 announced that in the past week its platform, in use by the University of Pennsylvania for its UPennAlert Emergency Notification System, had undergone an annual campus-wide test by the University's Division of Public Safety. This safety drill was conducted to ensure that all campus constituents—some 53,000 students, faculty and staff—continue to be notified with critical, accurate information in the event of any emergency.