Advertisement
Products & Newsletters
International Contract Assembly Group Acquires ATI
West Berlin, NJ - Apr 30, 2008 - International Contract Assembly Group, LLC (ICAG) has acquired Audio Technologies Inc. New funding and management provided by ICAG will allow ATI to modernize and expand its product line to better serve its target markets.
ICAG has named industry veteran Art Constantine to the position of vice president, sales and marketing. Constantine was formerly director of sales for both ATI and Day Sequerra. ATI introduced six new products at the NAB Show, and the company notes that it has more planned.
ICAG, a precision manufacturing facility, has long been a supplier of PC board assemblies and manufactured components for ATI. ICAG customers include Dell, General Dynamics, ITW and Kaiser Systems.
The company will continue to operate with sales based in New Jersey and manufacturing based in Arizona.
Want to use this article? Click here for options!
© 2008 Penton Media Inc.
Webinars
Critical Aspects of Tower Site Safety
Learn the steps you can take to ensure a safe working environment at a tower site.
33 1/3 Things You Forgot
Think wire is just wire? Think again.
Advertisement
Podcast Archives
Radio Currents Podcast, Oct 6
The House passes the Webcaster Settlement Act, another House bills looks to require HD Radio in all radio receivers, and the NAB Radio Show announces attendance figures.
Radio Currents Podcast, Sep 29
The FCC accepts method modeling for AM directionals, a CAP profile for EAS devices is released, the NRSC posts reports, and Rick Rapalee is named the DOE for Entercom Sacramento.
Blog
Talkback: The Radio Blog
Talkback, the Radio magazine blog, is your chance to post and comment on technical issues in radio.
Projects in Progress
Projects in Progress tracks facility installation projects from start to finish. Follow the progress of the WUVT-FM transmitter site upgrade.
Today in Radio History
Milestones From Radio's Past
The history of radio broadcasting extends beyond the work of a few famous inventors.
Current Issue
Clean up the Audio
Advancement of codec design has allowed lower bit-rates to be employed, and most codecs sound decent at these rates, but they are much more fragile with regards to distortion and susceptible to artifacts.






