Power to the People
One of the great ironies concerning RFID being used by the U.S. government to control people is that, thanks to technology, people have more power today than they’ve ever had.
One of the great ironies concerning RFID being used by the U.S. government to control people is that, thanks to technology, people have more power today than they’ve ever had.
A quick scan of the number of companies in different categories of our 2007 Buyer’s Guide to RFID Resources reveals something important about the market.
National Public Radio did a straightforward news piece on RFID—and privacy didn’t come up.
Baird has released its March report. The 15-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.
After tagging 30,000 files during the past four years, Hypo Landesbank Vorarlberg estimates its RFID application has paid for itself 50 times over.
The mobile device is designed to enable end users to add intelligence to their RFID deployments.
The German company’s new Product Tracking and Authentication application and Object Event Repository are designed to let companies more easily monitor and authenticate serialized products, such as RFID-tagged drugs.
A live Webcast explores some key technology, business and societal issues.
A quick scan of the number of companies in different categories of our 2007 Buyer’s Guide to RFID Resources reveals something important about the market.
AeroScout, a provider of real-time location systems (RTLS) using WiFi-based active RFID technology, today announced a major deployment for City Link, a U.K.-based express delivery provider. The deployment will see 15,000 tags distributed across 70 geographically dispersed locations.