The Future State of Technology

PC & Server Support

Our engineers are specialists who can install, modify, diagnose, clean, and repair computer network hardware and software both remotely and on-site.

Whether it's a hardware or software question, we listen carefully to your IT problems, asking questions in order to diagnose the problem.

We can design, install, and support your LANs (Local-area networks), WANs (wide-area networks), wireless networks, Internet, email and intranet systems.

In addition, Stuart Hall Technologies can provide you with day-to-day on-site administrative network support for all of your business users across a variety of work environments, from professional offices, small businesses, government departments, and large corporations. We will maintain your network hardware and software, diagnose and fix problems, and monitor the network to ensure its availability to your users.

Mother of Divine Grace School goes digital

As Jason Hall walks the corriders of Port Richmond's Mother of Divine Grade school, students work dutifully on their personal laptops, their fingers tapping away at the keyboards. The fifth grade students researched World War II era propaganda, and images once used used to convince Americans to buy war bonds flickered on flat-screen displays as Hall, president of the networking company Stuart Hall Technologies, retrieved a laptop cart. The entire scene looks like something out of a college classroom, with students typing away feverishly in a room lit by the soft glow of new technology. But at this K-8 grade school, the high-tech gadgetry is working to enrich much younger minds.

"This could be the first class that doesn't need text books," said principal Jane Ellen Lockhart. "This is beyond my wildest dreams, what we have here." The laptops - seen in nearly every classroom - are part of the school's push to be one of the most technologically advanced Catholic schools in the region. In fact, through these upgrades, Mother of Divine Grace could be "an example of technology for other Catholic schools to follow," said Lockhart. Thanks to funds generated by the school's Technology Task Force, a parent-run organization that held fundraisers and secured grant money, the school contracted Hall's Ambler, Pa.-based company to bring Mother of Divine Grace to the forefront of the digital age.

Rev. Joseph Logrip, church pastor and regional vicar of Philadelphia North for the Archdiocese of Philadelphia, said that after more than two years of effort, the Technology Task Force secured about $70,000 in funding to be used towards the equipment at the school. "They were really devoted and worked really hard on it," said Logrip of the task force. When asked how MDG stacks up technologically when compared to other Catholic schools in the region, Logrip only commented that parents wanted the school to be "state of the art."