Services

The physical layer is the whole point.

Most IT companies want to remote in. I want to open the ceiling tile. The cabling, the closet, the gear on the wall — the stuff you can actually touch is where most "mystery" problems live, and it's what I do best.

Port 01 — Main offering

Physical-layer work

Flagship

IT closet cleanup & documentation

The signature service. I go into the closet everyone avoids, identify every device and every cable, remove what's dead, organize what's alive, and label all of it. You get a clean closet and a plain-English map of your own infrastructure — so the next problem takes minutes to diagnose instead of days.

Copper

Cat5e / Cat6 cabling

New runs, repairs, terminations, and testing. Office moves, new desks, dead jacks — handled.

Coax

RG6 coax

Runs and repairs for internet, TV, and everything else still riding on coax.

Video

CCTV cabling

Camera cable runs and fixes — for the cameras you have and the ones you're adding.

Fiber

Fiber

Fiber runs and physical troubleshooting where copper won't cut it.

Phone

POTS lines (RJ-11)

Old-school phone lines still matter — fax, alarms, elevators. I trace and fix them.

Diagnosis

Network troubleshooting

"The internet is slow in that one room" usually has a physical cause. I find it.

Haul-away

Legacy equipment removal

The dead servers, dusty switches, and unknown boxes stacked in the corner? Identified, disconnected safely, and gone.

Port 02 — Also on the truck

While I'm there anyway

Not the headline act, but I do these all the time — usually discovered during the same visit.

Helpdesk

Desktop & laptop troubleshooting

Slow machines, weird errors, "it won't turn on" — fixed in person, at your desk.

Helpdesk

Printer troubleshooting

Yes, really. The printer. I'll deal with it.

Operations

Workflow improvement

I watch how your team actually works, then remove the tech friction slowing them down.

Savings

IT bill consolidation

Old phone lines, forgotten services, gear you're leasing but not using. I audit what you're paying for versus what actually exists in your building — the closet usually tells the truth.