Creating Smaller, Cheaper Passive UHF Tags
Researchers at North Carolina State University have applied a new technology called RF-only logic to create passive RFID chips that are 25 percent smaller than today’s integrated circuits.
Researchers at North Carolina State University have applied a new technology called RF-only logic to create passive RFID chips that are 25 percent smaller than today’s integrated circuits.
Avery Dennison’s tags can track totes in the supply chain and perishable items in stores; Keonn’s interactive AdvanLook solution engages customers; NXP’s Ucode DNA chip provide scryptographic authentication of vehicles.
Casual, fast-casual and quick-serve restaurants adopt wireless technologies to enhance the customer experience, ensure food safety and improve operations.
Companies using radio frequency identification to automatically track and manage assets are lowering costs, increasing revenue, and improving customer satisfaction and employee morale.
Some view the big productivity gains RFID technology can bring as a threat to workers’ jobs and wages, but the reality is complex.