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FREMONT, Calif., 28 Nov. 2008. Themis Computer's RES-22DCX and RES-32DCX servers were tested for NATO TEMPEST certification without the use of an external enclosure. Themis' Rugged Enterprise Servers (RES) 2RU and 3RU systems were selected for use in a surveillance program that requires TEMPEST Zone 2 certification. As a result of the certification for compromising emanations (CE) conformity, these servers are qualified in for use within Facility Zone 2 deployments by the Federal Office for Information Security.
"We work closely with our customers and partners to design and build rugged computing systems that provide high quality, superior scalability, and reliability. Our servers are notably designed to run mission-critical applications in hostile operating environments," says William Kehret, president of Themis Computer. "It should be reassuring to our OEM's and system integrators, that in standard configurations our Rugged Enterprise Servers are able to meet the system level emission require-ments for Zone-2 TEMPEST, without recourse to an external rack enclosure."
Themis engineers its RES systems for maximum configurability with one or two Dual- or Quad-Core Intel Xeon processors. The RES-22DCX and the RES-32DCX systems certified for Zone 2 use were configured with Dual-Core Intel Xeon processors.
The Federal Office for Information Security (Bundesamt fur Sicherheit in der Informationstechnik abbreviated as BSI) is the German government agency in charge of managing computer and communication security for the German government. Its areas of expertise and responsibility include the security of computer applications, critical infrastructure protection, Internet security, cryptography, counter eavesdropping, certification of security products, and the accreditation of security test laboratories. The Federal Office for Information Security is located in Bonn and has more than 400 employees.
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