Good news - you can win a Motorola RAZR V3 (locked to T-Mobile) if you take part in our contest. All you have to do is to invest about 3 minutes of your time and answer our 15-question survey.......
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RFID presents a conundrum. On the one hand, for it to be useful it has to be easy to read by a variety of readers across different organizations. On the other hand, when tags are easy to read,...
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Are you of a forgetful nature? Are you in the habit of misplacing things then and now? Have you ever lost your keys? If the answer to all these questions above is yes, then you certainly need RFID....
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Filed in archive Wireless
by gautam on March 30, 2006
G2 Microsystems has come up with an RFID solution that would result in at least a 75 percent reduction in the total cost of ownership. It is an ultra low power active RFID System on a Chip (SoC)...
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Employee sabotage of RFID trials and deployments was a sub-theme that several different speakers brought up at Smart Labels USA. The word "sabotage" is a loaded one, of course. So let's...
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If you want an overview of the big picture of the RFID market -- how big it is presently and the forecast for the future -- you need only look to yesterday's opening keynote at . Dr. Peter Harrop,...
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Odin Technologies of Virginia has developed a configuration, project management and deployment tool for RFID using the EasyReader module. It has a graphical-looking interface that they liken to...
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Intune, which manufactures RFID antenna, came a long way from Finland to exhibit and make connections as the Smart Labels USA show in Boston. I got a chance to snap a photograph of the company...
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It's Day One at Smart Labels USA here in Boston, Massachusetts. I will be bringing you live reports from the event. First, let me give you an overview of the event as a whole -- so far. Then, in...
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RFID seems to be a soft target these days. A group of more than 20 interest groups which includes physicians, tax reformers, privacy advocates and others have decided that RFID has no place in an...
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By now you've probably read about the supposed virus attack involving RFID tags. One of the reports that hit the news even claimed that cats could "get viruses" from RFID tags. I have...
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Now, this is what I call the perfect use of technology. First of all the Japanese used this technology for saving lives of disaster victims and now it's the turn of cows. Animal Industry Lab,...
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Editor's Note: Chris Kapsambelis's prior guest article was so popular that I am very happy to present another, this one on the topic of two-dimensional barcodes and how they are under...
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Filed in archive Healthcare
by gautam on March 24, 2006
RFID which is already going through a virus scare would now be used in China for fighting bird flu virus. Smart-tek has entered into an exclusive licensing agreement with SES Investment for marketing...
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AIM Global has come in defense of RFID Technology by questioning the technical paper - 'Is Your Cat Infected with a Computer Virus'. According to the paper RFID tags can be used for...
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Japanese are never short of ideas. The Japanese Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications is planning to use RFID for tracking disaster survivors. They intend to sprinkle disaster affected...
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Contactless payment cards are one of the intriguing and promising areas in the RFID space these days. While the Wal-Mart and DOD mandates tended to snap up the headlines, the payment systems using...
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Sponsored Post Cognio is one of our advertisers here at the RFID Weblog. I'd like to thank them for their support. But more than just mentioning an advertiser, I think Cognio offers a product...
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