To many, RFID signifies a technology employed to tag and track assets or goods within a facility or through a supply chain. But others, including RFID Journal and ABI Research, believe that definition ...
An electronic identification device that is made up of a chip and antenna. For reusable applications, it is typically embedded in a plastic housing, and for tracking shipments, it is usually part of a ...
Picture this: You’re sitting in the food court at your favorite mall with the family, munching on greasy kung pao chicken from Panda Express, followed by a warm, sweet Cinnabon, when a cordon of mall ...
Radio-frequency identification (RFID) tags have become a key component of global commerce, enabling stakeholders to track physical assets quickly and reliably. Deployed properly, the tags could be ...
A transmitter/receiver that reads the contents of RFID tags in the vicinity. Also called an "RFID interrogator." The maximum distance between the reader's antenna and the tag vary, depending on ...
China is on its way to becoming one of the largest markets for radio-frequency identification tags, propelled in part by U.S. importers that want the technology to be used for tracking assets, market ...
According to an announcement from Intermec Technologies Corp., a group of major manufacturers and technology providers are backing an RFID (Radio Frequency IDentification) protocol that could lead to ...
Given Walmart’s sheer size, it's a big deal any time it expands its use of RFID technology to improve the capabilities of its stores. And that’s precisely what has happened. As reported recently in ...
RFID-tracked cars could be on the horizon, as Austroads, the association of Australian and New Zealand road transport and traffic authorities, investigates how best to deploy the technology. Austroads ...
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