|   
  
    |  VIP Communicator - Automated Data Systems Inc. 
        
        
          
            | 1978 | The VIP
              COMMUNICATOR - The world's first hand-held pocket-sized TTY is
              introduced. |  Note -  Looking for more 
        info to add to this section. If you were involved with the company feel free to tell some history.  Many thanks  Ed Sharpe Archivist 
        for SMECC  info@smecc.org
   
        
        
          
            | 
 
 Rob
        EngelkeVIP Creator
 (Photo courtesy of Ultratec
        Inc.)
 |  __________________________________________ In 1978, Robert Engelke, the founder of Ultratec, was an electrical engineer designing devices to help people with communication disorders. Through his
 friend Herb Pickell, a prominent member of the Wisconsin deaf community at the
 time, Engelke became interested in improving text communications for individuals
 who are deaf. The name of the first company was 'Automated Data Systems
        Inc.'
 In the 1970s, TTYs cost between $650 and $1000, making them a luxury item that very few could afford. Working out of the basement of his home, Engelke developed
 a low-cost TTY that people could use more easily. The company's first TTY was the
 V.I.P. Communicator, a TTY the size of a pocket calculator.
   Engelke went to his first National Association of the Deaf (NAD) Convention in 1978, meeting with people to ask questions and test ideas. He asked TTY users to
 evaluate his work, and made changes based on their comments (a process that
 continues at Ultratec today).
    
 
        The VIP Communicator – one of the first TTYs
        produced by Robert Engleke - when the company was called  Automated
        Data Systems.  Hand-held, the VIP Communicator also included a
        little display you could clip onto your shirt that showed words as you
        typed so another person could view the conversation also!.  
        Shown here, the acoustic coupler is shown in the open position ready to accept
        a phone handset. From the Zimet/Black Collection
        at  SMECC - Photo (c)  SMECC
         |  
      |   
 The VIP Communicator – one of the
        first TTYs produced by Robert Engleke - when the company was
        called  Automated Data Systems.  At right-  Close-up of
        LED display  From the Zimet/Black Collection
        at  SMECC - Photos (c)  SMECC     
 At left-  Close-up shows this
        second example does not have the  top case opening to attachthe 'Talking Pocket' attachment.   At right-   
        The VIP is ready to travel with  coupler...
 all of it  fits into a nice belt pouch! From the
        Gene Rankin Collection
        at  SMECC - Photos (c)  SMECC
 |  
      |            
     
     
    
 Manual for the he VIP Communicator
        –   From the Zimet/Black Collection
        at  SMECC 
          
           |  
      |   TDI 1978-1979 International Telephone Directory of
        the Deaf from the  Paul and Sally Taylor Collection at 
        SMECC  |  
      | 
          Rob
          Engelke VIP creator in his own words, sign-interpreted.
         
           
         
           
         
           
             
           Rob Engelke
          - At  reunion time-
 Great to see all of the stories and find out what
          "really" happened to friends and classmates for the past 40
          years! Looks like just about everyone's had a great time, although I
          am terribly sorry to see the names of those that have already slipped
          away (glad to know that Mary Wright is insisting she HAS NOT YET
          slipped away - way to go Mary - please keep it that way). And thanks
          for the great website, Bob! A lot of WORK and we appreciate it!
 After getting my degree from UW Madison in Electrical Engineering, I
          married my wife, Sue, and for 10 years, we both worked at the
          University. I worked for several departments including the Space
          Astronomy Lab (worked on "space capsules" as they were known
          in those days), and later with the TRACE Center which is a
          rehabilitation engineering center that designs assistive communication
          devices for persons with severe, multiple communicative disorders
          (kids with CP and retardation and deaf-blind people for example).
          While there, I became interested in ways that deaf people could use
          the telephone and after several years working in the area, started a
          little company in my basement to make "TDDs" (basically
          small typewriter-like devices that deaf people use to communicate over
          the phone by "typing" to each other). Now, after 25 years,
          the Sue and I are still with the company (Ultratec.com) which has
          grown quite a bit and is located in the University of Wisconsin
          Research Park where we make, among other things, Susie and I have
          two sons, Christopher (after spending a year as a student and teacher
          in Katmandu Nepal, is currently finishing up his Anthropology degree
          at Arizona and then off to grad school), and Timothy (currently a
          junior at UW Madison in Political Science). All happy, and doing fine!
          (from the 'net-date?)
 
     |  
      | 
          Deaf-communication pioneer to receive honorary degreeMay 3, 2012 by David Tenenbaum  - University of Wisconsin
          (with permission) 
            
            
            
           
            On May 18, Rob Engelke, chief executive officer of Ultratec,
            Inc., will receive an honorary doctorate at a commencement ceremony
            at the Kohl Center on the UW-Madison campus. Engelke was cited for creating extraordinary advances that have
            enabled deaf and hard-of-hearing people worldwide to communicate via
            telephone. In the 1970s, Engelke was building computers and selling them to
            campus researchers. At about the same time that Apple’s founders
            were making computers in the garage, Engelke had already moved on. Realizing that deaf people could not use the telephone, he
            decided to make a teletypewriter that could communicate via text.
            Although some deaf people were using clunky, costly teletypewriters
            cast off by newspapers, their supply was finite. In 1977, Engelke founded Ultratec and began building a miniature,
            microprocessor-based teletypewriter (TTY) that plugged into a
            regular phone line. The $150 device allowed deaf people to converse
            with anybody else who had a TTY, including the government agencies
            and emergency services that began buying from Ultratec. Ultratec, unlike Apple, did not become a worldwide brand, but it
            did revolutionize telecommunications for the deaf in about 15
            countries. By listening to his customers in the deaf community, Engelke
            created two privately held firms that account for about 900 jobs at
            the University Research Park in Madison and a total of about 2,000
            nationwide. It’s not about the designer, Engelke says. “People cannot care less about what is inside the box,” he
            says. “It’s a mantra here: ‘Don’t talk about what you think
            you can do, listen to what people need. Then figure out how to get
            that to happen.’”  Having survived radical changes in the technological landscape --
            including ubiquitous texting on phones and computers -- Ultratec
            continues to demonstrate that you can do well by doing good. And it all started with listening. Engelke was born and raised in Madison. His father was principal
            of Nakoma Elementary School, and his mother worked as a clinical
            psychologist after her kids were grown. “We never had a new car, never had money to spare, but we were
            not starving,” he says. As a teenager, Engelke worked at Central Colony, the predecessor
            of the Central Wisconsin Center for the Developmentally Disabled,
            and “got an initial exposure to the idea that not everybody had
            the same range of talents and abilities.” After getting a bachelor of science degree in electrical
            engineering from UW-Madison in 1968, Engelke did technology work for
            the psychology department and began building computers -- until he
            met some deaf people and recognized the difficulty of life without a
            telephone. Working in his basement, Engelke figured out how to place a
            miniature TTY inside the plastic housing of an early electronic
            calculator. As Ultratec’s small, affordable TTYs began selling,
            they attracted the attention of Gregg Vanderheiden, director of the
            Trace Center on campus, which, then and now, advocates accessibility
            for emerging technologies.     “Today,
            Ultratec is the premier company internationally in the area of deaf
            telecommunication,” says Vanderheiden, a longtime friend. 
            “Not only did Rob reinvent (the TTY), he also invented an entirely
            new form of communication for individuals who are hard of hearing,
            called captioned telephony.”
 That business has grown into CapTel, a separate company that,
            like Ultratec, is also based in the research park. When a person
            with a hearing impairment uses CapTel, a “communications
            assistant” repeats the other party’s words so they can be
            interpreted by voice-recognition software. The assistant quickly
            corrects the automatic text, and a verbatim transcript is then
            routed to a screen on the user’s phone. The service is free to users and supported by small fees on
            telephone bills. CapTel works like a TTY when a deaf person calls a hearing
            person, providing the best of both worlds to millions more who have
            some hearing, but find phone calls challenging. Because these users
            hear the voice, the emotional content of the conversation is much
            richer, but they still get to read any undecipherable words.  CapTel has been a revolution, says Engelke, and it now employs
            about 700 people in Madison in a five-story building next to
            Ultratec’s factory. Engelke says he “was floored” to learn that UW-Madison has
            recognized his record of humanitarian and engineering success. “I think it’s a wonderful honor that I share with everybody
            who helped bring this about; clearly this is due to the efforts of a
            lot of people,” he says. One of them is Pamela Young-Holmes.  “She’s the kind of person who walks into your life and
            changes it,” Engelke says. “In 1987, she came in to complain:
            Her TTY wasn’t working, and we needed to be more careful about
            quality. I talked to her [Engelke is adept in American Sign
            Language], said that things do fail, but we fix them. I asked right
            there if she would consider working for us … and she now directs
            our consumer and regulatory affairs and customer service for CapTel.” According to Young-Holmes, “Rob is one of those rare,
            extraordinary men in life who has already left a footprint on earth
            far greater than his shoe size… Rob has put his heart, soul and
            brilliant intellectual mind to work for tremendous impact on the
            lives of so many others.” Ideas come from all directions, and the problem-solving engineer
            never seems to be in “pause” mode.  Watching an interviewer
            speed typing, he asks what technology is in use, and wonders whether
            it could be incorporated in a possible product for people who, like
            Helen Keller, are blind and deaf.  Admittedly, this is a tiny market with essentially no profit
            potential, but Engelke does a judo takedown on this “can’t do”
            logic. “We don’t expect to make money on this, but if we don’t
            make it, who will?” he asks. Engelke is married to Susan, who is chief financial officer at
            Ultratec. Both of their children have signaled an interest in working with
            Ultratec. Timothy, a lawyer, wants to get involved in business
            operations and in the advocacy and regulatory areas that affect the
            deaf and hard of hearing community. Christopher is experimenting
            with a communication strategy for “locked-in” people who have
            neurological problems and must communicate with agonizingly slow
            movements of facial muscles. The invention, Engelke says, produces such an obvious
            acceleration in their speech that the test subjects are demanding,
            “We've got to have this right now.”  Having read this far, you know where this is going. Christopher
            “is calling on Ultratec to produce a device,” Engelke says
            approvingly. Basically, Engelke isn’t much interested in ideas that don’t
            have a social purpose.  “We’ve got more than enough to do,” Engelke says.
            "If it was all about making money, I suppose there would be
            temptations for spin-off products, but that’s business for
            business’s sake, and that is not what we are interested in
            doing.”   |  
      |  |  
      | 
          
            | ULTRATEC Inc. Technology TimelineOur experienced engineers continually look for new ways to make text
      telecommunication more convenient and affordable, eliminating barriers to
      the phone through technology. Many of the capabilities you enjoy everyday
      with your TTY are Ultratec inventions.   |  
            | 1978 | The VIP COMMUNICATOR - The world's first hand-held
              pocket-sized TTY is introduced. (Company was Automated Data
              Systems at that time)
 |  
            | 1980 | Ultratec introduces the SUPERPHONE - The world's
              first TTY with memory, ASCII code, voice output, and touch-tone
              input. |  
            | 1981 | Ultratec introduces the world's first low-cost,
              full keyboard TTY, the MINICOM, making TTYs affordable to tens of
              thousands of people who are deaf or hard of hearing. |  
            | 1982 | Ultratec introduces the MINIPRINT - The world's
              first low-cost, printing TTY. Ultratec welcomes Dr. Robert H.
              Weitbrecht, inventor of the
              first TTY and renowned physicist, to its engineering staff. Ultratec introduces the first portable braille TTY for persons
              with both visual and hearing loss. |  
            | 1983 | Ultratec introduces the MINICOM II - An enhanced,
              extremely low-cost TTY that quickly becomes the market leader.   Ultratec introduces the WATCHMAN SIGNALING SYSTEM - A low cost,
              flexible family of signalers for alerting people with hearing loss
              to telephone ring and other household sounds. |  
            | 1984 | Ultratec introduces the
              INTELE-TYPE - The first
              portable 80-column printing TTY with upper/lower case letters,
              sophisticated multiple memory features, and auto answering.   Ultratec introduces the INTELE-MODEM - An
              ASCII/Baudot
              converting modem that allows home computers and ASCII terminals to
              communicate with TTYs. Ultratec collaborates on the TELEBRAILLE - A second portable
              braille TTY with advanced features and greatly reduced size and
              cost. |  
            | 1985 | Ultratec introduces the SUPERPRINT SERIES - The
              first modular, upgradeable series of printing TTYs with memory,
              auto-answer, ASCII, and human engineering to simplify training and
              use.   Ultratec makes a significant technical breakthrough with
              ENHANCED ACOUSTIC RECEPTION SYSTEM (E.A.R.S.) which greatly
              reduces compatibility and reception problems that have plagued
              users for years. Major telephone companies including Illinois Bell, General
              Telephone of California, Michigan Bell, Southern New England
              Telephone, Hawaiian Telephone, Alberta Government Telephone,
              Ameritech Services, Southern Bell, Bell South Services, and
              Manitoba Telephone choose Ultratec as their supplier of TTY
              equipment. |  
            | 1986 | Ultratec develops the MINICOM III and IV series of
              low-cost TTYs with expanded features and better improved factors. Ultratec develops the VOICE ANNOUNCER which tells the person
              receiving the call that a TTY is being used. This innovation
              reduces the risk of mishandled emergency calls and gives the TTY
              user a positive method of indicating the nature of the call. Ultratec continues to expand its service network across the
              United States and Canada, and begins establishing sales and
              service facilities in South America and Europe. |  
            | 1987 | Ultratec introduces the
              SUPERCOM, the first
              low-cost fully featured TTY. Ultratec introduces the TDD DETECTOR, a device that connects to
              the telephone line to detect incoming TDD/TTY tones so that
              emergency service agencies will respond appropriately. Ultratec begins manufacturing TTYs that communicate in numerous
              languages and codes for use in countries throughout the world. Ultratec introduces the first public access TTY, the PAY PHONE
              TDD (PUBLIC TTY), capable of being installed in pay phone booths. |  
            | 1988 | Ultratec develops the first LARGE VISUAL DISPLAY
              for TTY users who are visually impaired. Ultratec introduces the SUPER SIGNAL SYSTEM, the first
              comprehensive system that alerts the user to all of the sounds in
              his or her home with addressable modules. Ultratec invents and patents VOICE CARRY OVER and HEARING CARRY
              OVER (VCO/HCO) for dual party TTY relay systems, whereby a person
              may use his or her own voice to speak directly to the other party
              through the relay and have the operator relay text in the other
              direction. |  
            | 1989 | Ultratec introduces five new models of TTYs
              including models designed expressly for use by 9-1-1 and other
              emergency providers. Ultratec expands its operations to Great Britain, establishing
              a European sales office whose President and top management are
              deaf. Working closely with British deaf groups and British
              Telecom, new TTY models are designed to meet the unique
              specifications for Great Britain's deaf telecommunications
              network. Ultratec continues to expand its product line to include TTYs
              for more than 25 countries, 12 different languages, and four
              different telecommunications codes. Ultratec begins design and planning of its new TECHNOLOGY
              CENTER. In hearings before the California Public Utilities Commission,
              Ultratec TTYs are demonstrated to be more reliable and cost
              effective by a large margin in comparison to other TTY brands in
              California's TTY distribution program, the nation's oldest and
              largest distribution program. |  
            | 1990 | Ultratec introduces the COMPACT, a fold-up,
              pocket-sized TTY for mobile communications with advanced features
              for connecting to computers and information services. This is the
              first of several new generation products Ultratec will produce for
              the world TTY market. Ultratec expands its capabilities to include robotic assembly. Construction begins of the ULTRATEC HEADQUARTERS in the
              University of Wisconsin Research Park in Madison, Wisconsin. Ultratec begins building TTY products for AT&T. |  
            | 1991 | Ultratec is awarded its 21st state distribution
              program contract. Ultratec moves into its new 72,000 square foot barrier-free
              CORPORATE HEADQUARTERS AND TECHNOLOGY CENTER facility. As an employer with over 20% of the staff being persons with
              special needs, Ultratec is awarded a $250,000 training grant for
              training staff with disabilities. |  
            | 1992 | Ultratec introduces a new series of the PAY PHONE
              TDD (PUBLIC TTY). This is a motorized model for use in high
              traffic areas. There is also a motorized model designed for
              outdoor, all-weather applications. Ultratec develops AUTO ID. Auto ID is activated when the TTY is
              turned on. TTY tones are automatically sent to alert the answering
              party, such as emergency service personnel, that it is a TTY call. Ultratec develops and patents TURBO CODE, an enhanced
              communications protocol that allows TTY users to transmit their
              words as fast as they type. As long as both TTYs are equipped with
              Turbo Code, telephone conversations for TTY users are in
              "real-time." SUPERPRINT 4420, introduced by
              Ultratec, is a compact, printing
              TTY that offers the most advanced features available in a TTY. The
              Superprint 4420 offers a built-in printer with three selectable
              print sizes, call progress, optional ASCII, time and date
              functions, Auto ID, and Turbo Code. |  
            | 1993 | Ultratec introduces the
              UNIPHONE, the first ever
              combination TTY, standard telephone with volume control, and voice
              carry over TTY. The Uniphone can be shared by people who are deaf,
              hard of hearing, or hearing, making it the first universal phone
              that everyone can use.   |  
            | 1994 | Ultratec introduces new fully-featured SUPERPRINT
              4225 for acoustic use, 32k memory, Turbo Code, and convenient
              GA/SK keys. Ultratec announces a new design and new features for its series
              of printing TTYs. The new look includes a white and gray
              computer-style keyboard with convenient GA/SK and arrow keys. New
              model numbers in the series are SUPERPRINT 4425, MINIPRINT 425,
              and MINIPRINT 225. Ultratec introduces the new SUPERCOM 4400, the latest in the
              company's line of advanced TTYs. The SUPERCOM 4400 is a
              non-printing TTY that includes advanced capabilities such as Turbo
              Code, Auto ID, auto-answer, 32k memory, and direct connect
              features. Ultratec expands on Uniphone all-in-one technology to offer
              customers a choice between a basic model (UNIPHONE 1000) and an
              advanced model (UNIPHONE 1140) with memory, auto-answer, and
              dialing directory. The UNIPHONE 1150, a version of the Uniphone designed
              specifically for use in the UK, is tremendously well received in
              England. The Ontario Ministry of Health approves new Ultratec TTYs for
              its Assistive Devices Program in Canada. The program, which
              included Ultratec products since it first began, now offers over
              sixteen Ultratec models to choose from. |  
            | 1995 | Ultratec designs a new low-priced, easy-to-install
              shelf-top PUBLIC TTY. The new PUBLIC TTY ST simply bolts to any
              existing payphone shelf, making installation quick and easy. While
              still vandal-resistant, the new model can be used acoustically so
              it can be installed independently of the telephone service
              provider. Ultratec begins designing and producing alpha-numeric paging
              products for Motorola, the recognized leader in the rapidly
              expanding paging market. |  
            | 1996 | The MINICOM 7000 SERIES of advanced text telephones
              is introduced in the UK. Both the MINICOM 7000 and the MINICOM
              7000 PLUS feature advanced technology including direct connect,
              auto-answer, 32k memory, and a Relay Voice Announcer that tells
              hearing callers to phone through the National Relay Service. The
              Minicom 7000 Plus also includes a built-in printer. Ultratec introduces the EZCOM PRO TTY - A simple, low cost,
              direct connect only TTY with directory dialing, speed dial Relay
              key, an easy to use VCO request key, and a long battery life for
              portable use. The EZcom Pro is the first truly portable direct
              connect TTY that can be used with a cellular phone and a data
              interface.  TURBO CODE and AUTO ID become standard features offered in ALL
              Ultratec desktop TTYs. |  
            | 1997 | Ultratec announces the SUPERPRINT PRO80
              TTY(tm) -
              The most advanced TTY available. Designed for direct-connect use
              only, it includes a full-size computer keyboard, extra large
              32-character display, and a built-in, full-size 80-column printer
              that uses traditionally sized (8 1/2"
              wide) thermal paper. CALLER ID capability is included in a TTY for
              the first time, as well as customer favorites such as Auto-Answer,
              dialing directory, Relay Dial key, Relay Voice Announcer, Turbo
              Code, and Auto ID.   |  
            | 1998 | Ultratec, Inc. celebrates 20 years of connecting
              people with people!   |  
            |  | Ultratec announces two new additions to the
              SUPERPRINT PRO80 SERIES. The SUPERPRINT PRO80 GOLD(tm) and the
              SUPERPRINT PRO80 LVD(tm) TTYs. Both models boast all of the
              features of the standard SUPERPRINT PRO80 plus enhanced display
              options and other features. The SUPERPRINT PRO80 GOLD offers a two-line, 80-character
              display for easy reading of conversations and Caller ID
              information. The SUPERPRINT PRO80 LVD offers an impressive built-in Large
              Visual Display (one-line, 20-characters) for low vision users. The
              Superprint Pro80 LVD model also offers extra large printing
              capability in addition to the three print sizes offered in all
              Ultratec printing TTYs. |  
            |  | The COMPACT/C and the EZCOM PRO/C TTYs join
              Ultratec's line of products as ideal TTYs for use with analog
              cellular or cordless telephones. Ultratec is the first company to
              offer wireless TTY access that is easy and more affordable than
              previously available on the market.   |  
            | 1999 | Ultratec announces the CRYSTALTONE premiere
              amplified telephone. CrystalTone gives users flexibility to
              customize the sound quality, tone control, and volume level that
              they hear best. In addition to offering one of the most powerful
              amplifiers available, the CrystalTone includes an extremely loud
              ringer, a bright visual ring flasher, and popular phone features
              like redial, memory dial buttons and a large, easy-to-see keypad.   |  
            |  | Ultratec introduces its second phone in the
              CrystalTone line, the CRYSTALTONE PLUS. This top-of-the-line phone
              offers the most powerful amplifier (up to 50dB), a built-in
              traditional speakerphone and quality sound enhancement while
              screening out background noises.   |  
            |  | Ultratec and Sprint conduct a six-month technology
              trial in which Sprint's Telecommunications Relay Service uses
              Ultratec's new voice recongnition technology. FASTRAN is intended
              to improve the quality of communications for all relay users (deaf
              and hard-of-hearing) to communicate by phone.   |  
            | 2000 | Ultratec announces a powerful new loud telephone
              ringer - the CRYSTALTONE RINGER. The latest in the company's
              CrystalTone line of amplified products, the new ringer amplifies
              up to 95dB, substantially louder than the volume of a traditional
              ring.   |  
            |  | Consumer testing begins on
              CAPTEL, or Captioned
              Telephone, a new breakthrough that allows people who have
              difficulty understanding what is being said over the telephone to
              receive live captions of their telephone conversations. CapTel is
              the key to making telephone calls functionally equivalent to
              traditional voice calls, enabling people who are deaf orhard of
              hearing to enjoy telephone conversations with the same ease,
              speed, and confidence as telephone callers everywhere.   |  
            |  | Ultratec introduces the new SIMPLICITY SIGNALERS an
              attractive system of signalers that turn everyday sounds into
              signals that can be seen. Individual units include a variety of
              TELEPHONE RING SIGNALERS, DOORBELL SIGNALERS, SOUND SIGNALERS,
              REMOTE RECEIVERS and the ADD-ON STROBE. Simplicity also includes
              an exclusive wireless doorbell signaler, which uses radio
              frequency instead of traditional wires.   |  
            |  | Ultratec is named International Research Park
              COMPANY OF THE YEAR by the Association of University Related
              Research Parks. In presenting the award, AURRP commends Ultratec's
              leadership in advancing technology, its dedication to quality and
              innovation, and its commitment to diversity in employment
              practices.   |  
            | 2001 | Ultratec unveils its new five-story COMMUNICATIONS
              RESEARCH CENTER, the company's third building in the University of
              Wisconsin Research Park. This stunning landmark facility is
              dedicated to testing and supporting new communications
              technologies, including CapTel captioning service. |  
            |  | Every Relay in the nation supports Ultratec's
              enhanced communications protocol, TURBO CODE. |  
            |  | Ultratec adds the SIMPLICITY TELEPHONE/DOOR
              SIGNALER LTW. This combination signaler provides a cost-effective
              way to be alerted to both the doorbell and the telephone. |  
            | 2002 | Consumer testing continues on CapTel throughout the
              United States, with more and more states conducting consumer
              trials over the course of the year.   |  
            |  | In recognition of its adoption of Ultratec's CapTel
              and Fastran technology, the state of Wisconsin receives the NASCIO
              Recognition Award for Outstanding Achievement in the field of
              Information Technology.   |  
            | 2003 | CapTel technology is APPROVED BY THE FCC, enabling
              individual states to offer CapTel as part of their relay services.
              In announcing the decision, FCC Chairman Michael Powell states
              that CapTel “brings important innovation and additional choice
              to Americans with hearing disabilities.”   |  
            |  | Ultratec develops 2-line
              CapTel, offering CapTel
              users even greater flexibility/control over their own calls.   |  
            | 2004 | In January, Hawaii becomes the first state to offer
              FULL SERVICE CAPTEL to its Relay customers.  Many more states
              convert from consumer trials to full service CapTel over the
              course of the year.  By December, the majority of states,
              nationwide, offer full service CapTel as part of their standard
              relay service.  CapTel service is also available nationwide
              through the Federal Relay Service.   |  
            | 2005 | Expansion continues at Ultratec's Communications
              Research Center as interest and demand for CapTel service
              continues to soar.   |  
            | 2006 | The FCC approves IP-BASED CAPTEL service, paving
              the way for people to receive CapTel captions of their telephone
              calls using the convenience of the Internet.   |  
            | 2007 | CapTel expands to open a NEW CALL CENTER in
              Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Located in the heart of downtown Milwaukee,
              the new call center provides expanded service for CapTel users
              nationwide, while creating hundreds of job opportunities for local
              residents. Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett officially opens the new
              center.   |  
            | 2008 | Both Hamilton Relay and Sprint begin offering
              WEBCAPTEL service over the Internet. WebCapTel enables people to
              view captions of their telephone calls in their web browser during
              their conversations. With WebCapTel, people use whatever telephone
              they want - their cell phone, business phone, or home service -
              and still view captions of the call on their computer screen. |  
            |  |  |  
      | 
        
     
  The Superphone – Ultratec TTY released
        in the 1980s.  It was the first TTY with memory,
 ASCII code, voice output, and touch-tone input. (Photo
        courtesy of Ultratec Inc.)
 
          
        In 1980, Ultratec introduced the Superphone - a TTY that for the first time included memory capabilities and ASCII. Best of all, it cost under $500,
 which was a low price at the time.
   
 
     
 The Minicom II –
        introduced in 1983 as a portable inexpensive TTY.  Made it possible
        for families to afford more than one TTY, allowing them to communicate with friends and family in
        different areas.  (Photo courtesy
        of Ultratec Inc.)
   
          
        Recognizing that TTYs were a necessity, not a luxury, Ultratec changed the entire market in 1981 by introducing the Minicom TTY for under $200. For the
 first time ever, families could afford more than one TTY, allowing them to
 communicate with sons and daughters away from home or friends and relatives in
 different cities. The low-priced Minicom tremendously broadened the
 opportunities for people to communicate with TTYs. Through a grassroots effort,
 people who were deaf began selling Ultratec TTYs to their friends and families.
 Thanks to their efforts, the number of households with TTYs grew immediately.
 Many of these early TTY advocates, such as Bob Harris , Dot & Steve Brenner,
 Robert Weitbrecht, Betty & Chuck Segler, and many others, established businesses
 selling TTYs.
   
 
 
 From the Tom Rule Collection At SMECC1987 Ultratec introduces the SUPERCOM, the first
              low-cost fully featured TTY.
  The Inteletype – introduced in 1984.
         (Photo courtesy of Ultratec
        Inc.)
      
 Ultratec COMPACT 
        (Photo courtesy of Ultratec Inc.) 
 
     Dr. Robert Engelke, President of
        Ultratec, with Dr. Robert Weitbrecht. (Photo
        courtesy of Ultratec Inc.)
 
      Dr. Weitbrecht invented the
      modem that made TTY communications for the deaf possible.  Dr.
      Weitbrecht worked with Ultratec in the later part of his career, and
      Ultratec's West Coast Distributor in California is still named after him (WCI
      - Weitbrecht Communications, Inc.)  Ultratec includes a picture and
      acknowledges Dr. Weitbrecht's work and contributions to TTY development in
      the user manual of every TTY Ultratec produces. (Photo
      courtesy of Ultratec Inc.) 
           (Photo courtesy of Ultratec Inc.)
 
 
 History of UltratecTechnology and opportunities for TTY users have changed a great deal
      over the past 30 years! Throughout this time, Ultratec
      has led the way — inventing new technology to help people
      communicate with over the phone. In 1978, Robert Engelke, the founder of Ultratec, was an electrical
      engineer designing devices to help people with communication disorders.
      Through his friend Herb Pickell, a prominent member of the Wisconsin deaf
      community at the time, Engelke became interested in improving text
      communications for individuals who are deaf. In the 1970s, TTYs cost between $650 and $1000, making them a luxury
      item that very few could afford. Working out of the basement of his home,
      Engelke started Ultratec to develop a low-cost TTY that people could use
      more easily. The company's first TTY was the V.I.P. Communicator, a TTY
      the size of a pocket calculator. Engelke went to his first National
      Association of the Deaf  (NAD) Convention in 1978, meeting with people
      to ask questions and test ideas. He asked TTY users to evaluate his work,
      and made changes based on their comments (a process that continues at
      Ultratec today). Impressed by Ultratec's commitment to improving TTYs,
      other people active in the deaf community became part of the Ultratec
      team. In 1980, Ultratec introduced the Superphone - a TTY that for the
      first time included memory capabilities and ASCII. Best of all, it cost
      under $500, which was a low price at the time. Recognizing that TTYs were a necessity, not a luxury, Ultratec changed
      the entire market in 1981 by introducing the Minicom
      TTY for under $200. For the first time ever, families could afford
      more than one TTY, allowing them to communicate with sons and daughters
      away from home or friends and relatives in different cities. The
      low-priced Minicom tremendously broadened the opportunities for people to
      communicate with TTYs. Through a grassroots effort, people who were deaf
      began selling Ultratec TTYs to their friends and families. Thanks to their
      efforts, the number of households with TTYs grew immediately. Many of
      these early TTY advocates, such as Bob
      Harris , Dot & Steve Brenner, Robert Weitbrecht, Betty & Chuck
      Segler, and many others, established businesses selling TTYs. Ultratec has always involved people who are deaf in its TTY development
      to be truly responsive to what people need. People wanted portability, so
      Ultratec responded by designing the Compact/C.
      People needed pay phone access, so Ultratec developed the Public
      TTY.  People wanted professional options, so Ultratec developed
      the Superprint
      4425 and deluxe Superprint
      Pro80 series.  Plus, Ultratec released a line of supporting
      products, including Simplicity
      signalers, TTY
      detectors, and the CyrstalTone
      loud phone ringer.  By listening to what users need to be successful,
      Ultratec has improved communication for everyone. Building on its expertise in text telecommunications, Ultratec
      developed the CapTel Captioned
      Telephone, which gives telephone users the benefit of text captions
      throughout their conversations.  Now people with varying degrees of
      hearing loss can continue enjoying the telephone without missing a beat. Today, TTYs are available to people throughout the world. Ultratec is
      recognized as the world’s largest manufacturer of text
      telecommunications equipment.  The company continues to be involved
      in the deaf and hard of hearing communities at the state and national
      level. Several of the people who work at Ultratec are deaf or hard of
      hearing, or have family members who are deaf. Just wait until you see what Ultratec does next…. 
      From the Ultratech website 2012   |      |