Manufacturing NEWS Text size: T T T

NCR to Begin Tagging Its Hardware

The firm will use its own RFID products and services to track and maintain service histories on the equipment it sells.

By Mary Catherine O'Connor

Dec. 22, 2005—NCR a Dayton, Ohio, business equipment and services provider that also sells RFID products and services, says it will begin putting its tags where its mouth is by applying RFID tags to its own products and tracking them through its supply chain. The company plans to begin carrying out this policy in the first quarter of 2006, starting with products it makes for retail point-of-sale (POS) systems. The company is making the move to improve its own supply chain management, asset tracking and device maintenance processes. NCR first announced plans to tag its own products earlier this year, at the RFID Journal LIVE! Europe conference, where it also said it would begin selling RFID products and services to European firms (see NCR Extends Its RFID Initiative).

John Greaves, NCR's vice president of RFID solutions, says the first NCR systems to be tagged will include the company's kiosks and FastLane self-service check-out systems. NCR’s kiosk products, such as the NCR 7401, can be deployed in retail stores to enable consumers to inquire about product details or shop for items not on display. The FastLane systems let consumers ring up their own purchases by scanning product bar code labels or RFID tags.

Initially, Greaves explains, NCR will tag its POS equipment with its own UHF EPC Gen 2 Class 1 tags, but going forward, the firm will likely use tags with other operating frequencies and other protocols for equipment in different industries, such as retail banking. In January, NCR will begin attaching what Greaves calls "master tags" to the units. Encoded to these tags will be an ID that will correlate, through an NCR database, with product data about the POS unit. Such information will include an NCR model number, purchase order information and the address of the retail location where the device will be installed, as well as the lane number within the store where it is to be installed. This data will be initially helpful to NCR's team of installation engineers, who install the systems inside retail locations.
Once deployed, the unit's service and maintenance history will also be associated with the master tag. Details relating to the components built into the unit, such as their manufacturer and a product identifier, will also be associated with that unit's master tag ID in the NCR database, but the parts themselves will not initially be tagged.

In 2006, once NCR's suppliers begin attaching RFID tags to the parts used in the POS units, the parts’ tag IDs will be associated with the master tag data in the NCR system. Greaves says that during routine service visits, NCR technicians will also be applying master tags to POS units already installed within retail locations. Each product's component data and maintenance history will then be accessable via this tag ID.

post a comment


Login and post your comment!

Forgot your password?


Not a member?
Signup for an account now to access all the features of RFIDJournal.com.




more Manufacturing articles

PREMIUM CONTENT
TOOLS & RESOURCES
RFID Journal Virtual Events

sending it your way

Sign up for one of our E-Newsletters.

Enter Your Email Address:

take the poll

Are you concerned about your present or potential RFID technology provider going bankrupt?

RFID EVENTS

RFID Journal LIVE! 2012
Apr. 3-5, 2012
Orlando, Fla.

RFID Journal LIVE! Europe—Scandinavia
Oct. 24-25, 2012
Oslo, Norway

RFID BUYER’S GUIDE

Looking for RFID Products and Services?
Search the RFID Buyer’s guide to resources.

Private RFID Executive Education
C-Level executives get Up to speed quickly.
rfidjournal.com/execed
Get Pay-Per Click Ads on RFID Journal
More qualified leads than Google.
rfidjournal.com/textads