Till now we had heard of application of RFID in retail stores, logistics, shipping industry but it would never have struck our minds that RFID could be used for teaching English. You must be...
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Yesterday we were talking about the implementation of RFID in the fitness world and today it's the turn of environment. With pollution levels reaching alarming levels worldwide, professors of...
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Filed in archive Market Size
by ehsan on April 27, 2006
I saw this interesting report by a market research company, RNCOS, titled "RFID Industry Analysis 2006,". In this report, as one of the results, it's been mentioned that RFID's use...
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RFID Tribe has come out with a new survey on the RFID workforce. It shows North America leading the world in RFID-related employment -- today. But in ten years the projections have Asia clearly in the...
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Filed in archive Healthcare
by gautam on April 26, 2006
The application of RFID seems to be endless. In one of our earlier posts we talked about RFID locks and just recently we talking about RFID purse. Now Casio has come up with something for fitness...
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Former Gov. Tommy Thompson, the man who was one of the high profile supporters propagating implanting microchips in people's arm for medical purposes must be in a state of shock. His state,...
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One of the interesting points that came up several times at the recent Smart Labels USA Conference was the fact that companies are utilizing multiple frequencies of RFID. A single company might be...
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A team of six women at the Simon Fraser University have created a new kind of fabric purse which can detect its contents and alert the owner in case something is missing. The Ladybag is meant for...
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We all possess a cell phone and it has become a part of our daily lives. Let's see what we generally do with our cell phone - make calls, SMS, play games, capture images, probably this is what...
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David Zhou of MoreRFID.com (our content partner here at the RFID Weblog) recently interviewed Dr. Hau Lee, who is a world-leading expert in Supply Chain Management, a professor of operations,...
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This comes as a surprise to me. According to a survey conducted by the organizers of the easyFair Pack and Track Food exhibitions, UK, the country's food manufacture's are slow in adopting...
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According to a top Homeland Security official, future documents issued by the government might feature embedded computer chips that can be read at a distance of up to thirty feet. Such arrange would...
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More than 500 delegates from 31 countries attended RFID Smart Labels USA which generated a host of relevant information. IDTech Ex, who sponsored the event, has summarized some of the important...
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For those people cooking seems to be a Herculean task, Vita-Craft has come up with a stainless steel robotic cookware with the power of computer controls. The pots and pans have built in sensors and...
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Editor's Note: I am pleased to provide another guest post by popular guest blogger, Chris Kapsambelis. The author notes that there are national retail chains still doing manual tracking of their...
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Filed in archive Retail
by gautam on April 15, 2006
The date has been finally set. Wal-Mart would no longer be accepting the use of Gen 1 tags on the cases and pallets it receives from its suppliers. The deadline was announced during a speech at the...
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I just want to remind you all to take the RFID Weblog survey -- and be entered in a drawing to win a Motorola RAZR V3 (locked to T-Mobile) phone. My husband has the Razr and he loves it.......
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AIM Global, the industry association, has been actively studying the use of barcodes as a backup to RFID. AIM Global noted this in a recent newsletter article about barcodes to back up RFID:Every...
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It's almost been a month since researchers at the Amsterdam's Free University created a radio frequency identity (RFID) chip infected with a virus to prove that RFID systems are vulnerable...
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