Privacy EDITOR'S NOTE
Viewing Articles: 1-10 of 31
Why I believe more passionately in radio frequency identification now than I did when I first launched RFID Journal, 10 years ago this week.
2011 saw some economic ups and downs, but many companies turned to RFID to track the locations of their products and assets—and to monitor their conditions.
At RFID Journal LIVE! 2011, an unprecedented wealth of knowledge will be shared by end users with hands-on experience deploying real-world RFID systems.
End users at RFID Journal LIVE! LatAm were highly engaged and eager to explore how radio frequency identification can improve the way they do business.
There is still a great deal of misunderstanding regarding what the technology is and does—and how it might be abused—that the industry needs to address.
Facts are important, because people can't make good decisions without them—but many journalists don't seem to care.
Some jobs may be eliminated as adoption grows, but far more will be created than lost.
As radio frequency identification proliferates, the potential for abusing the technology will rise—but democratic capitalist societies have mechanisms to respond to and limit abuses.
I am so sure end users will benefit from attending LIVE! 2010, our eighth annual conference and exhibition, that I'm willing to guarantee it.
In preparation for the presidency, Barack Obama gets a little advice on what the United States needs to do about radio frequency identification.