RFID News Roundup
Intelleflex announces new semi-active, passive products; Confidex releases two metal-mount Gen 2 tags; Sun’s Dallas RFID Center moves to Colorado; Mattel playing with RFID.
Intelleflex announces new semi-active, passive products; Confidex releases two metal-mount Gen 2 tags; Sun’s Dallas RFID Center moves to Colorado; Mattel playing with RFID.
The new service assures that health-care, pharmaceutical and chemical companies’ products remain at appropriate temperatures during transit.
Enterprise infrastructure software provider BEA this week announced the 2.0 release of its WebLogic RFID Enterprise Server. The software solution is aimed at providing centralized visibility and management of the increasingly distributed nature of RFID deployments.
Interoperability testing performed this summer by EPCglobal’s EPC Information Services working group proved successful.
Research firm Venture Development Corporation of Natick, Massachusetts, just released a bulletin on item-level tagging in the pharmaceutical industry. This article highlights the key points.
One sign of just how far RFID has come is that half the new technologies being written about are going to spell RFID’s demise.
One sign of just how far RFID has come is that half the new technologies being written about are going to spell RFID’s demise.
The system can locate carts up to 1 mile from a store, stop them from straying too far and track shopping behavior
The RFID middleware market is ever-changing and increasingly competitive, and set to exceed $190 million by 2010, according to Venture Development Corp.
Commanders want to track rescuers’ actual position within burning buildings.