In a typical North American city, at least 45 per cent of municipal employees, including police, fire, public works, parks and inspections departments, are mobile. But they need to access information when out of the office, so cities throughout Canada and the United States have been rapidly adopting next-generation technologies that enhance wireless connectivity. Graduates of this program are able to gain employment in jobs that involve wireless systems. They are well-versed in radio frequency measurement and troubleshooting, wide-area networking and an array of wireless systems.
Graduates have found employment at cell phone service providers, equipment manufacturers, in-house IT departments, sales departments and specialized telecommunication and networking companies.
There are numerous opportunities in the planning, developing, manufacturing, co-ordinating, implementing, maintaining, and managing of telecommunications systems.
This certificate program prepares graduates from electronics, computer engineering, physics, and telecommunications for work on the cutting edge of wireless telecommunications. Courses cover technologies such as: mobile CDMA/GSM/UMTS, VoIP, ATM, SONET, MPLS, WiFi, WiMax, RFiD, remote sensing, fibre optics, and microwave. Curriculum is kept current with the assistance of industry leaders in the wireless field. The emergence of new technologies keeps this program on the leading edge.
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