Filecatalyst Case Studies

In industries where file integrity is paramount, FileCatalyst provides the "guaranteed delivery" that standard internet protocols cannot promise.

In healthcare, FileCatalyst isn’t just an IT upgrade; it is a patient care tool.

A global medical device manufacturer needed to transfer large DICOM (medical imaging) files from a mobile MRI unit in rural India to a specialist diagnostic center in Germany. The satellite link had 650ms latency and 5% packet loss. Standard TCP transfers kept timing out, forcing radiologists to diagnose based on compressed thumbnails. filecatalyst case studies

FileCatalyst is not a magic wand—it requires a proper deployment architecture. But as these case studies prove, when configured correctly, it turns the WAN into a LAN.

If your organization faces file transfer challenges, consider exploring FileCatalyst and its proven benefits. With FileCatalyst, you can accelerate your file transfers, improve collaboration, and drive business success. The satellite link had 650ms latency and 5% packet loss

Commercial printing requires the transfer of enormous design files (PostScript, PDFs with embedded fonts/images). A 1% packet loss on a standard FTP connection can corrupt a file, leading to print errors and wasted materials.

Researchers have used FileCatalyst Workflow to collect and transfer thousands of patient records from countries with restrictive internet environments, such as Qatar and China. The tool allows for the secure movement of sensitive data where standard methods would often fail due to network instability. 3. Government & Military: Securing Mission-Critical Data But as these case studies prove, when configured

The UN uses FileCatalyst to deliver situational reports from the field. They found the software far more resilient than FTP, allowing for much faster turnaround times when bringing in critical news materials.

The studio deployed FileCatalyst Direct endpoints at both locations. By switching to UDP acceleration, the software ignored the latency and ramped up transfer speeds to 850 Mbps (95% of available bandwidth).