People often ask what CasCom does. My short answer? We throw nerds out of helicopters.
It sounds like a joke. It’s not. It’s a business model.
We specialize in deploying and supporting technology infrastructure in places most IT providers won’t go. Remote exploration sites. Fly-in mining camps. Camps with no roads, no towers, and no margin for error.
What does that actually look like?
First Boots on the Ground
Before any drilling rig touches the earth, the logistics chain starts moving. We partner with aviation teams, remote logistics providers, and camp operators to fly people, power, and gear into the bush. Our technicians ride in with the first wave. They’re carrying satellite terminals, networking equipment, surge-protected power systems, and everything needed to make the tech layer invisible because when it works, no one should notice it.

We survey the terrain. We set up the power. We align satellite uplinks. We build the local network. We weatherproof everything. And we do it fast.
Sustaining the Backbone
Once operations begin, our work shifts to keeping the digital heart of the camp beating. That includes:
- Stable internet for field data transfer and crew comms
- Internal WiFi and wired networking
- Power backups and surge protection
- Remote monitoring and support
- Secure access and data protection
Whether it’s a short-term drilling camp or a multi-season laydown facility, we embed with the team. We rotate staff in and out. We adapt to weather, scale, and shifting priorities. We stay until the job is done.

Beyond the Signal
What we provide isn’t just connectivity. It’s operational continuity.
The ability to transmit critical data to HQ. The assurance that your people can communicate in emergencies. The stability that keeps a project on track even when the weather turns or the power flickers.
So yes. We throw nerds out of helicopters.
Because real IT support doesn’t stop at the edge of town. It starts when the road ends.
Contact CasCom to make your next remote deployment reliable from day one.

CasCom Throwing Nerds out of helicopters since … 1996.