Video 
Interpretations

Video chat interpretations for hospitals and police
Laptop screen showing a video call with a smiling woman on the left and a doctor with a female patient on the right.
Smiling male doctor wearing glasses, white coat, and text "650k"

US hospitals and the traffic police talk to foreigners and the deaf through VIS

Our precious long-liver :) If they can be any happier, they’d definitely be — if VIS ordered a new look & feel, as we keep recommending… :) Jokes aside, wholeheartedly proud to be a part of this big thing since 2011. Technologies grow and change, WebRTC replaces Flash — we remain together.
Laptop screen showing VIS Interpreter video call with a woman wearing a headset on the left and two men talking in a car on the right.
Blurred image of an ambulance with flashing lights speeding on a city street at night.

Before: time limit

Interpreters had to reach hospitals by foot. Someone could have died by their arrival 
(hopefully not).
Video call screen showing a smiling woman with red hair wearing a headset and two smaller participants in the corner.

After: connect in no time

“Interpreters at your fingertips” is the new slogan. A couple of seconds for a few clicks - and a certified translator says “hello”.
Smiling woman holding a baby wrapped in a blanket and wearing a hat.

Before: workforce limit

Interpreters must have lived in the city where the hospital is. There could be none in a small town.
App window titled VIS Connect displaying a list of countries with flags: Belarus, Benin, Bermuda, Bolivia, butan.

After: world is the limit

How many Americans are certified translators to… Belarusian? Compare to the number Belarusians speaking fluent English. Now interpreters translate from home, frequently from the home country. Their number has 
grown in times - to 700+, as well as the number of languages - to 169, including American Sign Language.
Hospital corridor with closed doors, a nurse pushing an empty bed, and a reception desk on the right.

Before: benefit & revenue limit

Therefore, the hospitals were not getting enough quality service - and the company wasn’t getting potential revenue.
Video call interface showing a smiling man with a headset on the left and a woman and uniformed police officer smiling inside a car on the right.

After: benefit & profit increased

Price per interpretation reduced following costs. Number of interpretations per day rocketed, increasing profit. Company signed up interpreters of different specializations, not just medical. Traffic police started solving foreigner cases right in the car.
Black padlock icon on a light gray background indicating security or locked status.
Secure interpretations by video & phone
HIPAA compliant encrypted calls by both video chat and PSTN. WebRTC meets SIP
Black wallet icon on a light gray background.
Automatic fair charge & payment
Pay and get paid for the time connected to the system. Calculated, charged from clients and paid to interpreters automatically.
Black gear icon centered on a light gray background.
Quality assurance & administration
Administrators connect to the calls and check quality. For police, officers at the station connect to in-car interpretations.

Review from client

"If you need a programmer, this company is the one! No fear. They do what they say they are going to do. I would certainly work with Fora Soft again in the future."
Logo with stylized letters 'VI' in black and blue, a blue globe with connecting nodes above, and the text 'VIDEO INTERPRETATIONS' below.
James Mitchell Parker · Baraboo, Wisconsin, the USA
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