Computech-XP

Computech-XP Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Computech-XP, Telecommunication Company, utah county, Pleasant Grove, UT.

We are a commercial low-voltage contractor based in Utah, specializing in network infrastructure, security cameras, digital signage, structured data cabling, Voip, wireless access points and POS system installations across Utah.

From 1 store to 5+ radar sensor deployments: what actually changes technicallyYour first radar sensor installation in re...
05/07/2026

From 1 store to 5+ radar sensor deployments: what actually changes technically

Your first radar sensor installation in retail teaches you how to execute.

Your third teaches you what you should never improvise again.

When you’ve deployed the same system across multiple locations, you start seeing patterns that no manual mentions:

• High exposed ceilings with industrial HVAC → always create the same dead zones unless you adjust the mounting angle.
• Wide open layouts without divisions → require more sensors than the initial plan suggests to eliminate blind overlaps.
• Shared conduit with electrical runs → will bite you every time if you don’t certify Cat6 before closing the walls.

You don’t learn these things on the first site.
You learn them when the second and third site repeat the exact same problems.

What you build after several installations isn’t just accumulated experience.
It’s a repeatable process:

• Standardized site survey with documented variables by environment type
• Sensor placement based on coverage patterns, not visual estimation
• Certification as a non-negotiable deliverable
• Clear documentation so the next technician can execute without calling you

One well-installed system in a single store is a job.
A process that works flawlessly in any store is a real competitive advantage.

23 radar sensors.3 consecutive nights of work.1 busy retail store that stayed fully open during business hours — zero di...
04/30/2026

23 radar sensors.

3 consecutive nights of work.

1 busy retail store that stayed fully open during business hours — zero disruption to daily operations.

That’s what a clean, high-precision sensor deployment looks like when the physical infrastructure is executed properly.

A trusted partner brought us in to upgrade their client’s retail location with a full radar sensor network for real-time people counting, queue management, and loss prevention.

The ex*****on had to be flawless and happened entirely after hours:
• 23 radar sensors installed with laser-measured placement
• Dedicated rack + patch panel deployed
• All new cabling pulled cleanly through conduit and fully terminated
• Every run certified Cat6 before closing the rack

In retail sensor deployments, the sensors themselves are only half the story.

The real make-or-break factor is the physical layer underneath: precise positioning, clean cable runs, proper termination, and certification. One loose termination or one misaligned sensor can turn expensive analytics into unreliable data.

This is why we treat the infrastructure behind the sensors with the same rigor as the technology itself.

Just wrapped a radar sensor deployment in UT this week. 🔧22 sensors installed, rack mounted, patch panel terminated and ...
04/24/2026

Just wrapped a radar sensor deployment in UT this week. 🔧

22 sensors installed, rack mounted, patch panel terminated and labeled, Cat6 certified throughout. Retail space with exposed ceiling — conduit work from scratch.

Project came in through a partner referral. That's the kind of work we love — in and out, clean ex*****on, client happy.

Based in Utah — available for subcontract work across the region. If you need a reliable crew for structured cabling, rack builds, sensor deployments or network installs, let's connect.

Most retail businesses manage their IT infrastructure through multiple vendors — one for cabling, one for cameras, one f...
04/17/2026

Most retail businesses manage their IT infrastructure through multiple vendors — one for cabling, one for cameras, one for network storage, one for security systems.

That coordination overhead has a real cost. In time, in miscommunication, and in accountability gaps when something doesn't work and everyone points at someone else.

This week we completed a full deployment inside a retail location — single team, single point of contact, start to finish:
→ 13 cable runs
→ 7 cameras deployed across the floor
→ QNAP network storage configured
→ Video alarm tablet + public viewing monitor installed
→ 29 camera resets across the existing system
→ Speaker installation

One environment. One team. Every system integrated and operational.

That's what consolidated IT service delivery looks like in practice — less coordination overhead for the client, cleaner ex*****on, and one number to call when something needs attention.

🔧 Looking for a Fire Alarm Technician in Utah – Contractor Role | $40/hrIf you hold an active Utah Fire Alarm License, w...
04/15/2026

🔧 Looking for a Fire Alarm Technician in Utah – Contractor Role | $40/hr

If you hold an active Utah Fire Alarm License, we want to hear from you.

We’re a growing IT & field services company with consistent work orders in Utah, and we need a reliable contractor to handle fire alarm installations and service calls.

💵 Pay: $40/hour
📍 Location: Utah
🗂️ Work type: 1099 Contractor – flexible, work order based

What we need from you:
✔️ Valid Utah Fire Alarm License (this is the #1 requirement)
✔️ Field experience with fire alarm systems
✔️ Own transportation and tools
✔️ Reliable and detail-oriented

No license? Unfortunately we can’t move forward — it’s a hard requirement for this work.

Interested? Send us a DM with your license info and experience. We’re hiring now and onboarding is quick. 🚀

Last week we got a call from a customer.They needed a full cabling installation — rack, patch panel, terminations, label...
04/09/2026

Last week we got a call from a customer.
They needed a full cabling installation — rack, patch panel, terminations, labeling — at a Burger King location in Fort Bridger, Wyoming.

The timeline was tight. The work had to happen overnight so the location could open on time.
We said yes.

Our team drove out, walked into a live commercial kitchen environment after closing, and got to work. Rack mounted. Cables pulled. Every termination punched down and labeled. Every connection tested.

By the time the sun came up — it was done.

That's the kind of call that doesn't come with a perfect set of conditions. It comes with a deadline, a location, and the expectation that you'll figure out the rest.

We did.

Fort Bridger, Wyoming ✅
Overnight installation ✅
Delivered before opening. ✅



We started with an empty rack and 90+ cables waiting to be pulled through the ceiling.Then came the terminations. 96 por...
04/07/2026

We started with an empty rack and 90+ cables waiting to be pulled through the ceiling.
Then came the terminations. 96 ports. One by one.

Today, we're done.

Every cable landed in its exact port. Every connection tested. Every access point live across the entire space.

The rack is closed, labeled, and ready to scale from day one.

This is what the finished result looks like when each step is done right — from the first cable run to the last patch.
Thanks for following along. 👊



At what point in a cabling project does everything go right — or completely wrong? Right here. This exact step.The rack ...
04/03/2026

At what point in a cabling project does everything go right — or completely wrong? Right here. This exact step.

The rack is mounted. The cables are pulled through the ceiling. Now comes the part most people never see — and the part where most installations go wrong. Patch panel termination.

Every single cable has to be punched down to the exact port it was mapped to. One mistake here — a wrong pair, a loose connection, a skipped label — and you're troubleshooting blind weeks from now when a workstation loses connectivity and nobody knows why.
This is the moment that separates a network that just works from one that actually holds up under pressure.

No shortcuts. No guessing. Port by port, cable by cable.

We're not done yet — but when we are, every connection will be tested, documented, and ready to scale.

Follow along. The final result is coming. 👇

70+ network drops, a brand-new server rack, and hundreds of patch panel terminations. 🏢⚡But long before we get to the sa...
03/19/2026

70+ network drops, a brand-new server rack, and hundreds of patch panel terminations. 🏢⚡

But long before we get to the satisfying "after" photos of a perfectly organized IT closet, the most critical phase of any office build happens right here: The Rough-In.

We are currently pulling the infrastructure for this new location, which brings up a crucial piece of advice for any business moving into a new commercial space:

💡 Always run 20% more network drops than your current headcount requires.

Why? Because once the drywall is painted and the ceilings are closed, your network layout is practically locked in. Copper cable is cheap. Tearing open finished walls six months later because you forgot a printer station or a Wi-Fi Access Point? That is incredibly expensive and disruptive to your team.

Plan your physical infrastructure for where your company will be in 3 years, not just where it is today.

Stay tuned for Phase 2 as we turn these raw cables into a fully operational rack in the coming weeks! 👇

What you see in these photos is the final result: a flawless communication rack and precisely installed sensors for a ne...
03/13/2026

What you see in these photos is the final result: a flawless communication rack and precisely installed sensors for a new retail store. 📡

What you DON'T see are the 40+ hours of night and early morning shifts our tech team invested just this week to make it happen. 🌙🔧
In the retail world, delaying a grand opening due to IT issues is not an option. Deploying this infrastructure overnight allows us to install complex technology without disrupting the construction work or the client's opening schedule.

We stay up late so that on ribbon-cutting day, everything works perfectly. A huge shoutout to our field technicians for their hard work in getting everything ready to go. 👏

Does your IT provider have the commitment to adapt to your business's critical timelines?

The best IT provider is the one you don't even know exists. 🤫In the tech industry, there's a slightly thankless reality:...
03/11/2026

The best IT provider is the one you don't even know exists. 🤫

In the tech industry, there's a slightly thankless reality: when everything works perfectly, no one remembers IT. But when the system goes down, it's the end of the world.

At Computech-XP, our biggest indicator of success isn't the number of emergencies we put out (the famous "firefighting"), but how many we manage to prevent. We do this by actively monitoring and maintaining our clients' infrastructure long before a failure can occur.

Technology should be an invisible tool that drives your business forward, not a daily headache.

Is your company constantly putting out tech fires, or do you have the peace of mind of "invisible IT"? Let us know in the comments! 👇

Address

Utah County
Pleasant Grove, UT
84062

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 7pm
Tuesday 8am - 7pm
Wednesday 8am - 12am
Thursday 8am - 7pm
Friday 8am - 7pm
Saturday 9am - 7pm

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