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A Brooklyn laptop thief learned the hard way that LoJack can locate more than just stolen cars, cops said. Eric Wilson, 41, smashed a rear window of an apartment on Park Place near Buffalo Avenue i⦠...
LoJack for Laptops--Absolute licensed the Lojack name from the car theft recovery company--can survive the entire stripping and reformatting of the hard disk.
Almost everyone likes to complain about 'Big Brother' watching us. But it's the same modern technology that Big Brother uses that helped Hialeah Police locate an elderly man with Alzheimer's who ...
LoJack recently released a list of the top 10 most stolen and recovered LoJack-equipped vehicle models in 2013, which was topped by the Honda Accord for the fifth year in a row.
LoJack, based in Dedham, Mass., markets an anti-theft system that helps police recover stolen vehicles. LoJack provides police departments with tracking equipment and sells the VHF transponders to ...
LoJack Corp. will buy Boomerang Tracking Inc. for 63 million Canadian dollars (US$48 million) expanding its operations to Canada. LoJack, a Westwood, Mass., company that makes equipment for ...
LoJack to Protect Classic CarsStolen vehicle recovery specialist LoJack, one of the first companies to dedicate itself to stopping car thieves from doing what they do best announced today it will ...
LoJack announces the next generation of self-powered stolen vehicle recovery system. The self-powered Stolen Vehicle Recovery System does not draw any power from a vehicle's battery or electrical ...
I just love some of these security news stories. For example: Police in Bellevue, Washington have been fighting a large car theft crime spree. One of the tools in their arsenal is remote ...
LoJack is a service used to track down stolen automobiles. Using the same radio technology, I imagined that special transmitters would be embedded in laptops to allow tracking the exact location ...
LoJack's American division will end its sales operations in June, but will continue supporting stolen vehicle services indefinitely.
CalAmp Corp., which disclosed an unsolicited bid for LoJack Corp. in December, has reached a deal to buy the maker of car theft-recovery systems for $134 million.
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