Draft:Sheridan Technologies


Sheridan Technologies Corporation
TypePrivate
Industry
FoundedDecember 13, 2021; 4 years ago (2021-12-13)
FounderJames Sheridan
HeadquartersVancouver, Washington,
United States
Key people
James Sheridan, President and CEO
Services
Websitesheridantech.io

Sheridan Technologies Corporation is an American engineering services and product development company based in Vancouver, Washington. The company provides software, hardware, firmware, artificial intelligence development, electrical engineering, manufacturing product development, rapid prototyping, additive manufacturing, 3D printing, laser cutting, and design services.[1]


The company was incorporated on December 13, 2021.[1] It is registered as a United States federal contractor under UEI E2FWZNT8KPY5 and CAGE code 9AVH9.[2]

History

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Sheridan Technologies Corporation was founded in 2021 in Vancouver, Washington.[1] The Better Business Bureau lists James Sheridan as the company's President and CEO.[1]

The company appears in federal procurement records for a Department of the Navy award notice involving laptop computers or equivalent equipment.[2]

Services

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Sheridan Technologies provides engineering and product development services for electronics and related systems. Thomasnet describes the company as providing product development and engineering services for complex electronics, including 3D modeling, product design, mechanical engineering, software development, AI or software development consulting, embedded firmware development, PCB layout, additive manufacturing, 3D printing, and rapid prototyping.[3]

The Better Business Bureau lists the company's services and business categories as including product development, manufacturing design, engineering, prototyping, volume production services, manufacturing software, hardware, firmware, electrical engineering development, circuit board design, embedded systems, hardware design, industrial automation, mechanical design, medical devices, mobile software, research and development, robotics automation, and user experience design.[1]

According to Thomasnet, Sheridan Technologies serves the aerospace and defense industries.[3] The company describes its work as focused on complex electronics, embedded systems, intelligent connected products, AI-enabled hardware, robotics, autonomy, medical devices, industrial electronics, industrial automation, smart equipment, and connected devices.[3]

Industries and applications

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Sheridan Technologies states that it supports aerospace, defense, space, industrial automation, robotics, manufacturing, automotive, transportation, agriculture, environmental systems, consumer electronics, connected devices, healthcare, and medical technology projects.[4]

The company describes typical aerospace and defense work as including embedded systems, flight adjacent software, sensor fusion, autonomy, controls, secure software and firmware development, hardware and electronics design, and program rescue for delayed or failing initiatives.[4] It describes its industrial automation and robotics work as including industrial controls, robotics and mechatronics integration, embedded firmware and electronics, manufacturing test fixtures, legacy system modernization, and supplier or manufacturing coordination.[4]

For healthcare and medical technology, Sheridan Technologies states that it supports medical device software and firmware, healthcare platforms and integrations, system architecture, risk analysis, verification driven development, technical advisory, and remediation.[4] For consumer electronics and connected devices, the company lists embedded firmware, hardware design, wireless connectivity, device integration, rapid prototyping, validation, manufacturing readiness, and post launch issue resolution.[4]

Approach

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Sheridan Technologies describes its engineering approach as including first principles problem framing, risk aware scoping, design for test and manufacturability, integrated verification and validation, single accountable program leadership across disciplines, transparent communication, and visible progress.[4]

The company's website describes its operating model as using senior level expertise, disciplined execution, single point accountability, lean overhead, and an integrity first approach.[4]

Federal contracting

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A SAM.gov award notice identifies Sheridan Technologies Corporation as the awarded contractor for a Department of the Navy procurement for laptop computers, specifically HP 470 G9 notebooks or equivalent equipment.[2] The award notice lists the company at its Vancouver, Washington address and identifies the company by UEI E2FWZNT8KPY5.[2]

Recognition

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Sheridan Technologies is accredited by the Better Business Bureau and has an A+ BBB rating.[1] In 2026, James Sheridan stated on LinkedIn that Sheridan Technologies had been nominated for the BBB Torch Awards for Ethics.[5] The BBB describes the Torch Awards for Ethics as awards that honor businesses and nonprofits for putting integrity into action.[6]

Public commentary

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James Sheridan has been quoted as CEO of Sheridan Technologies in articles about consumer electronics, cybersecurity, artificial intelligence infrastructure, edge computing, and embedded systems security.

In 2026, Business Insider quoted Sheridan in an article about rising video game and gaming hardware prices, identifying him as CEO of Sheridan Technologies and a former firmware engineer for HP.[7] In that article, Sheridan discussed tariffs, rising hardware costs, and competition for semiconductors amid demand from artificial intelligence systems.[7]

TechTarget quoted Sheridan in an article about edge computing and AI sustainability, describing Sheridan Technologies as a company that designs and builds embedded systems and AI-enabled products.[8]

SmarterMSP quoted Sheridan in an article about cybercrime and small-business cybersecurity risk. Sheridan discussed phishing infrastructure, stolen credentials, commodity ransomware tooling, remote management tools, identity hygiene, multifactor authentication, patching, endpoint detection, backups, and network segmentation.[9]

The Embedded Edit quoted Sheridan in an article about vulnerability exploitation and patching challenges in embedded systems. Sheridan discussed outdated network stacks, vendor software development kits, debug interfaces, over-the-air update planning, production credentials, software bills of materials, secure update capability, threat modeling, network segmentation, access control, monitoring, and limiting exposed services.[10]

MoneyLion quoted Sheridan in an article about consumer electronics pricing and component-cost pressures. Sheridan discussed the exposure of budget laptops, smartphones, gaming PCs, tablets, routers, and consoles to memory and storage component cost increases.[11]

References

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  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Sheridan Technologies Corporation". Better Business Bureau. Retrieved June 30, 2026.
  2. 1 2 3 4 "7E--OPTION - Laptops (Model HP 470 G9 Notebook or Equivalent)". SAM.gov. United States General Services Administration. Retrieved June 30, 2026.
  3. 1 2 3 "Sheridan Technologies: Vancouver, WA 98684". Thomasnet. Retrieved June 30, 2026.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "Industries We Serve". Sheridan Technologies. Retrieved June 30, 2026.
  5. "James Sheridan LinkedIn post on BBB Torch Awards nomination". LinkedIn. 2026. Retrieved June 30, 2026.
  6. "BBB Torch Awards for Ethics". Better Business Bureau. Retrieved June 30, 2026.
  7. 1 2 Shimkus, Ben (June 2026). "Price Hikes Make Gaming Feel Like a Luxury Hobby". Business Insider. Retrieved June 30, 2026.
  8. "Can edge computing make AI more sustainable?". TechTarget. June 9, 2026. Retrieved June 30, 2026.
  9. Williams, Kevin (June 2, 2026). "The rise of the part-time hacker". SmarterMSP. Retrieved June 30, 2026.
  10. O'Connell, A.J. (June 16, 2026). "Vulnerability Exploitation Soars: DBIR Reveals Patching Crisis in Embedded Systems". The Embedded Edit. Retrieved June 30, 2026.
  11. "Your Next Laptop Could Cost 20% More by Summer — Why Buyers Are Rushing". MoneyLion. June 18, 2026. Retrieved June 30, 2026.
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References

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