Aug. 6, 2004—The following are news announcements made during the week of Aug. 2.
Conference Focuses on IP Issues
Patents and intellectual property issues have been thrust to the fore by Intermec's patent infringement suit against Matrics. A conference this fall will address patent issues in the
RFID industry. The
RFID-IP Conference 2004 will be held in San Francisco from Oct. 5 to 7, and is being organized by RFID-IT Conferences, a new company set up by Patrick Reilly, founder and CEO of the nonprofit
IP Society. The conference features workshops on IP issues and speakers focused on IP strategies, dispute resolution and other topics. It is aimed at strategists for RFID vendors as well as end users interested in understanding IP issues in the RFID market.
Dutch Transit System Goes RFID
The Netherlands will be one of the first countries in the world to have a full RFID payment system throughout its entire public transportation network. The Dutch e-ticketing project involves a consortium of the five largest transit operators in the country and covers trains, subways, buses, boats and trams.
ASK, a French manufacturer of RFID
smart cards, has been selected to supply the RFID smart cards and tickets. The cards will use Philips' Mifare 4K
chip, which conforms to the
ISO 14443A smart card standard. The rollout will begin in Rotterdam in the fourth quarter and be extended to other cities in 2005. The system is expected to be completely deployed by 2006.
RedPrairie Teams with SAMSys
RedPrairie, a Waukesha, Wis.-based provider of supply chain execution software, has established a value-added reseller partnership with
SAMSys Technologies. Under the agreement, RedPrairie will offer SAMSys' line of RFID
reader and
antenna systems as part of RedPrairie's RFID
middleware and end-to-end RFID solutions. A Richmond Hill, Ontario-based provider of RFID hardware and consulting services, SAMSys designs and manufactures multifrequency, multiprotocol
UHF readers that can be configured for use in different regions around the world. SAMSys' reader technologies will be integrated with RedPrairie's RFID middleware solutions to enable customers to achieve
EPC compliance for the U.S. Department of Defense, Wal-Mart and other retailers requiring RFID tagging.
SkyeTek Extends HF Read Range
SkyeTek, a Boulder, Colo.-based provider of
high-frequency (13.56 MHz) RFID technology, says it has developed an HF antenna amplifier for its SkyeRead family of 13.56 MHz RFID readers. The antenna amplifier provides twice the normal read range—about three feet (1 meter)—of HF readers and is intended for such applications as scanning individual items with a hand-held reader. This antenna amplifier plugs into the SkyeRead M1. The amplifier consumes only 350 mA of power and generates up to 1 watt of RF power, depending on the antenna configuration. General availability is scheduled for late October 2004.