This article was originally published by RFID Update. September 8, 2008—Passive UHF RFID technology has matured and improved enough to consistently meet the growing demand for IT asset management ...
Automation can take many forms within a manufacturing facility. Xemelgo’s software, combined with RFID tagging technology, enables manufacturers like Sekisui Aerospace to automatically locate and ...
This article was originally published by RFID Update. February 18, 2009—Procter & Gamble (P&G) has ended its highly touted practice of using RFID to track promotional displays at Wal-Mart stores.
Vizinex RFID, a developer and manufacturer of high performance RFID tags tailored to specific applications, recently introduced the next generation of its long read range tag, the XLR. The XLR has an ...
AUSTIN, Texas—HID Global, a worldwide leader in trusted identity solutions, has announced two additions to its broad family of RFID asset-tracking tags. The HID SlimFlex Ultra technical label is ...
Radio-frequency identification (RFID) specialist Impinj has devised a way to make it easier for manufacturers and stores to put RFID tags on shirts, CDs and other consumer items, a move that should ...
Great white hope or great white elephant? Despite a number of trials and pilots worldwide, the use of RFID to track baggage for airlines has not taken off in the way many industry pundits expected.
The application and business processes in the solution rely on RFID technology to determine the real-time location of critical assets and issue an alert when an asset being tracked is not in its ...
Wherever Wal-Mart leads, few competitors or vendors fail to follow. Therefore, the march toward automated inventory control begins. Wal-Mart has instructed Wherever Wal-Mart leads, few competitors or ...
In the film “Any Given Sunday,” Al Pacino, portraying Coach Tony D’Amato, poignantly compares football to life, describing it as a “game of inches … one half a step too late or too early and you don’t ...
Reports that the military has started outfitting firearms with RFID tags for tracking have raised security alarms. The concern: What if the enemy uses the tags to track soldiers on the battlefield?
Start-up firm Somark Innovations is touting technology designed to help tag and trace livestock with radio frequency identification (RFID)-enabled ink tattoos. The St. Louis-based company announced ...