RFID in Transportation Expert Views
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EPCIS can support chain-of-custody verification—without a cumbersome data burden.
The former worldwide program director of RFID for Hewlett-Packard and Asia Pacific regional director for EPCglobal explains how the technology can be used to improve the quality of your business decisions.
An RFID e-seal designed for ammunition, file or medical boxes can monitor for tampering.
RFID providers have developed tags that make it easier and more cost-effective to track and manage returnable transport items.
Hiring a systems integrator that is invested in your company's goals will help ensure the success of your RFID deployment.
The transformation of a technology negative into a positive could make it affordable to monitor the condition of many products and things.
Select radio frequency identification as a solution only when its capabilities provide an immediate or projected benefit to a process that makes it more effective than choosing another technology.
By using a group ID as well as an individual tag ID, we could verify a shipment of goods, reduce shrinkage and validate receiving without perfect read rates.
By measuring the distance between RFID interrogators and passive tags, companies can better differentiate items as they pass through portals.
Based on a study involving a real-life logistics provider, the average payback period for an EPC Gen 2 RFID implementation is between 12 and 24 months.