Concurrent Technologies PLC
OTC:COTGF
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Concurrent Technologies PLC
OTC:COTGF
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United Utilities Group PLC
OTC:UUGWF
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Naturgy Energy Group SA
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Concurrent Technologies PLC
Concurrent Technologies PLC designs and sells rugged embedded computer boards and systems that go inside other companies’ equipment. Its products are built for demanding uses such as defense, aerospace, transportation, industrial automation, and telecoms, where customers need hardware that can run reliably for long periods in harsh environments. The company’s core job is to supply the computing “building blocks” that help machines and platforms process data, control systems, and communicate. It makes money by selling hardware, related customization, and support to equipment makers, defense contractors, system integrators, and government customers. Buyers usually choose these products when they need compatible, long-life computer technology that can fit into an existing system architecture rather than a standard office PC. That makes the company more of a specialist component supplier than a mass-market computer maker. What sets the business apart is its role in the embedded computing chain: it is not selling finished consumer devices, but the specialized boards and modules that other firms use to build complex products. This tends to create sticky relationships because customers care about long product lifecycles, technical compatibility, and certification requirements. In simple terms, Concurrent Technologies sells the critical computing hardware that sits deep inside mission-critical machines.
Concurrent Technologies PLC designs and sells rugged embedded computer boards and systems that go inside other companies’ equipment. Its products are built for demanding uses such as defense, aerospace, transportation, industrial automation, and telecoms, where customers need hardware that can run reliably for long periods in harsh environments. The company’s core job is to supply the computing “building blocks” that help machines and platforms process data, control systems, and communicate.
It makes money by selling hardware, related customization, and support to equipment makers, defense contractors, system integrators, and government customers. Buyers usually choose these products when they need compatible, long-life computer technology that can fit into an existing system architecture rather than a standard office PC. That makes the company more of a specialist component supplier than a mass-market computer maker.
What sets the business apart is its role in the embedded computing chain: it is not selling finished consumer devices, but the specialized boards and modules that other firms use to build complex products. This tends to create sticky relationships because customers care about long product lifecycles, technical compatibility, and certification requirements. In simple terms, Concurrent Technologies sells the critical computing hardware that sits deep inside mission-critical machines.