Wal-Mart, Sam’s Club Push RFID Further Along
Carolyn Walton, Wal-Mart’s VP of information technology, revealed three new initiatives that are part of what she called a “change of focus” in the retailer’s RFID program.
Carolyn Walton, Wal-Mart’s VP of information technology, revealed three new initiatives that are part of what she called a “change of focus” in the retailer’s RFID program.
Impinj announces high-octane firmware; Intel-powered RFID readers emerging; Adasa’s hands-free RFID tag creation and application; HP announces solution to link BizTalk with SAP’s Auto-ID Infrastructure; RFID device makers leverage open source to interface with IBM; RSI ID Technologies unveils tamper-evident RFID tag.
EPCglobal held its annual conference this week in Chicago. While no major deployments or end user initiatives were unveiled at this year’s event, a number of new products, certifications, and capabilities were announced which collectively speak to the steady progress of EPC-based RFID adoption.
Alien Technology’s CEO told EPC Connection attendees that the company is seeing significant sales growth for closed-loop applications of RFID, rather than demand from goods manufacturers seeking to comply with retail-industry tagging mandates.
At its annual member conference, EPCglobal says its work in setting and testing industry standards is beginning to pay off, and that its focus has shifted to helping companies deploy RFID.
Leading RFID printer/encoder manufacturer announced a deal to be acquired by Vector Capital, a private equity firm. Printronix also said its senior management will remain in place after the deal closes and the company will continue to follow its existing strategy, despite disappointing RFID sales.
The maker of RFID and bar-code printers and encoders expects the purchase will help it grow its RFID sales, according to the company’s senior VP of marketing.
EPCglobal opened its annual event EPC Connection today in Chicago. As vendor announcements have streamed out of the show this morning, there are new tag products galore, an encouraging sign of a rapidly maturing ecosystem. Those new tag announcements are summarized in this article.
An organization comprised of Southern California marine terminal operators says trucks using the ports must carry RFID tags by Dec. 1.