By Claire Swedberg
Jan. 12, 2012—
Zebra Technologies has announced that it is partnering with
Checkpoint Systems'
OATSystems division to incorporate OAT's passive-
tag radio frequency identification middleware into some of its own products. The partnership will enable Zebra Technologies to sell hybrid solutions to its customers, enabling them to employ both active and passive
RFID tags, with data from both systems being managed and stored on a single software platform.
The agreement provides Zebra with an
original equipment manufacturer (
OEM) software license for OATxpress, which is part of Checkpoint's OAT Foundation Suite. The first products from Zebra to use OAT middleware are expected to be made available later this year, according to Lou Chauvin, Zebra's VP of product management and engineering, though he does not specify when this will occur. For its part, says Prasad Putta, OATSystems' general manager and the executive VP of merchandise visibility at Checkpoint Systems, Checkpoint will offer its middleware solution with Zebra products to its own customers (users of passive RFID technology) that request the hybrid options.
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Zebra Technologies' Lou Chauvin
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Zebra Technologies has long been a manufacturer of a variety of
printer-encoders for passive ultrahigh-
frequency (
UHF)
EPC Gen 2 RFID labels, and has been a provider of
Wi-Fi-based active RFID tags and real-time location systems (
RTLS) since 2007 (see
Zebra Buys WhereNet). Customers of Zebra's printer-encoders include retailers from around the world (for examples, see
Grupo Éxito Launches Major Electronics Tagging Pilot,
RFID Helps Florida Shoe Retailer Keep Its Customers From Walking Away and
RFID Makes Common People an Uncommon Store). On the other hand, many of its other customers are in the industrial or government sectors, such as aerospace, defense or manufacturing, and use Zebra's RTLS solutions to track the locations of tools or equipment within a facility using active tags. Increasingly, Chauvin says, customers have sought to augment their existing RTLS setups with passive technology, in order to track items that may move through a supply chain or throughout their facility, but that do not require RTLS monitoring.
OATSystems' customers include not only retailers, but also such companies as
Rockwell Collins, a provider of aviation electronic equipment (see
Rockwell Collins Explores Ways to Benefit From RFID), and
Parker Hannifin, an $11 billion manufacturer of motion and control technologies and systems to industrial and aerospace manufacturers, such as
Airbus (see
A Flurry of High-Memory Tags Take Flight).