NetworkAntics services are available to business and residential customers throughout Castro Valley. Our experienced staff of computer network specialists, wireless installation consultants, and surveillance camera technician's work with CCTV cameras, Cell, WiFi, WiMax, in-building signal repeating equipment, and integrate a wide assortment of other networking technologies have proudly serviced Castro Valley clients for over five years. We improve cell phone or any wireless signal in commercial buildings, police departments or any brick and mortar facilities and secure them with completely scalable state of the art IP based cameras systems. Please contact NetworkAntics customer service with comments, questions or to schedule an appointment. You may also click on one of our services offerings below to learn more:
Before the arrival of European settlers the area was settled by the Chocheņo (also spelled Chochenyo or Chocenyo) subdivision of the Ohlone Native Americans. With the arrival of Europeans, Castro Valley was part of the land granted to Mission San Jose in 1797. The area Castro Valley now occupies was part of the extensive colony of New Spain in what was the state of Alta California. Castro Valley is named after Don Guillermo Castro, who was a soldier in the Mexican army and a rancher. Castro Valley was part of the original 28,000 acre (110 kmē) land grant given to Castro, called Rancho San Lorenzo . This land grant included Hayward, San Lorenzo, and Castro Valley, including Crow Canyon, Cull Canyon, and Palomares Canyons. Castro had a gambling habit and had to sell off portions of his land to pay gambling debts. The last of his holding was sold in a sheriff's sale in 1864 to Faxon Atherton for $400,000.[1] Atherton (after whom the city of Atherton is named[1]) in turn began selling off his portion in smaller parcels. Two gentlemen named Cull (the namesake of Cull Canyon) and Luce bought some 2,400 acres (10 kmē) and began running a steam-operated saw mill in Redwood Canyon. The Jensen brothers also bought land from Atherton in 1867. During the 1940s and 1950s, Castro Valley was known for its chicken ranches. Later it developed into a bedroom community, where workers live and commute to their jobs in the surrounding communities.