Interpretation equipment
Booths, consoles, receivers — everything interpreters need to do their job properly. We handle the technical side so they can focus on the language.
Technical equipment for conferences is our trade — not a sideline. We bring the right gear, set it up, run it through the event, and pack it out when it's done.
Booths, consoles, receivers — everything interpreters need to do their job properly. We handle the technical side so they can focus on the language.
Sound, projection, microphones, and the bits that hold it all together. One setup, one team, no gaps.
Cameras, streaming, interpreters dialling in — we make hybrid events work the way they should, not the way they usually do.
Small devices, big difference. A guide speaks, everyone hears — even in a noisy production hall or outdoors.
Projection screens, LED displays, cameras, and recording. If you need a clean edit after the event, we handle that too.
Wireless mics, tabletop mics, speakers — set up for the room, not just plugged in and hoped for the best.
Timer, laptop, presentation remote, ambient lighting — the small things that organisers tend to forget until five minutes before it starts.
Conferences, seminars, press events, board meetings, multilingual gatherings, hybrid sessions, livestreams, factory tours — if it involves people communicating in a room (or across rooms and countries), we've probably done something similar. The specifics always depend on the venue and programme, so the first step is usually a brief call.
Both — and in practice, most clients want both. Dropping off equipment and leaving isn't really our style. We design the setup, install it, operate it on the day, and handle whatever comes up. You get one point of contact for the whole technical side of the event.
Yes, and that's typically how multilingual events need to work. Interpretation equipment on its own isn't enough — it has to be integrated with the sound, projection, microphones, and streaming so everything moves together. That's something we plan from the start, not something we bolt on at the end.
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