Timaeus Mobile
Cmed Technology understands that clinical trials are global, 24/7 operations with widely varying site needs. In response, we developed Timaeus Mobile to provide investigator staff and monitors rich functionality and full access to required data from field and remote environments with limited infrastructure and intermittent data connectivity.
Your Choice--with or without physical keyboard
Cmed provides two formats of appliance to use Timaeus Mobile. The Intel®-based Mobile Clinical Assistants (MCAs) format allows keyboardless operation--ideal for use in rugged environments. Te Timaeus Mobile laptop appliance is built from industry-standard laptop configuration, enabling office-standard keyboard-based input.
Both formats can travel wherever your study teams go. Both are secure, clinical appliances with 21 CFR Part 11-compliant biometric authentication and full data encyption.
Capture and manage data from anywhere—even when offline
Timaeus Mobile uses a specifically-architected data management model (similar to that used in leading smart phone applications) that provides investigator staff and monitors full access to required data and functionality regardless of whether they are online or off. This enables them to work anywhere, at any time.
Connect remotely without the need for extra technology
Timaeus Mobile incorporates embedded mobile connectivity technology, eliminating the need to carry extra devices such as wireless cards or mobile modems. When combined with Timaeus' small size, biometric fingerprint scanner and touch screen, this yields a highly portable eClinical station that is easy to carry and operate from anywhere.
Synchronise data in real-time from hard-to-reach places
Timaeus supplements this offline capability with mobile-friendly synchronisation technology that ensures auditable, regulatory-compliant data integrity and enables remote collaboration. Field personnel only need access to a low-bandwidth GSM network to synchronise captured data, resolve queries and perform SDV in real time.









