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Electronic voting systems, wireless voting systems, voting displays, chamber automation
and legislative management systems. |
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The first Roll-Call voting system was
demonstrated to the U.S. Congress in 1922 by what was then known as the Thompson
Voting Machine Company. Years later, founder of the company Marshall F. Thompson
and his brother would form International Roll-Call after innovating the voting process
with a series of patents.
Roll-Call
revolutionized the art of electrical voting in 1942, installing the first high-speed
voting systems in the Virginia Senate and House of Delegates. International Roll-Call
pioneered the use of computer driven voting systems and the utilization of software
programs to ease the growing administrative and clerical workload involved in the
legislative process. With IBM's introduction of the Series/1 multi-user mini-computer,
and onward to the birth of today's Personal Computers, International Roll-Call has
continued to implement the latest technology into the legislative process, thereby
expanding the product line and power of total Legislative Management systems over
large-scale networks.
Today
and for the last twenty years, International Roll-Call has provided Voting Systems,
Companion Software and support to legislative customers throughout the United States,
most recently installing completely new systems in North Dakota, North Carolina,
Michigan, and Nebraska. The days of bulky electro-mechanical systems are bygone,
having given way to the computer age. Through the use of fiber-optics technologies,
a robust and powerful multi-user system connects all of those involved in the legislative
process in ways that, years ago, would have seemed impossible. Whether it's high-speed
voting systems or management software, International Roll-Call continues proudly
in the tradition of its innovative founders, not merely witnessing technological
history, but making it.
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