How to Market RFID Products and Services in a Slowing Economy
With the economy weakening, here’s what RFID technology and service providers need to know to make the most of their marketing dollars.
With the economy weakening, here’s what RFID technology and service providers need to know to make the most of their marketing dollars.
Check out this guy’s body art.
With the economy weakening, here’s what RFID technology and service providers need to know to make the most of their marketing dollars.
The contract drug developer and manufacturer has been exploring both RFID and 2-D bar-code serialization, and is preparing an RFID pilot for one of its customers, dermatologic drug company Galderma.
Here’s how smart RFID companies will survive the current economic downturn.
Baird has released its November report. The 17-page document is a worthwhile read for anyone requiring an overview of the industry’s last 30 days. For those without time to do so, we have reprinted here the report’s summary.
The company’s item-level RFID deployment is already yielding some significant benefits at two distribution centers and eight of its Willis Lifestyle stores.
An oil refinery is using the company’s new AD-902 tag to help it track personnel and assets during emergencies.
Avery Dennison introduced the AD-902, a rugged Gen2 passive UHF tag with 512 bits of user memory. A refinery used the AD-902 to replace its active RFID employee ID tags that are used to track emergency response personnel.
The European Pallet Association is successfully using EPC Gen 2 passive RFID tags to track 1,000 pallets in Switzerland, and plans to expand the pilot to additional countries in 2009.