Department of Defense Wants RFID Shipments
Attendees to a U.S. Department of Defense summit being held this week in Washington, D.C., got an update on the department’s RFID initiative: the DOD is ready to accept RFID-tagged shipments.
Attendees to a U.S. Department of Defense summit being held this week in Washington, D.C., got an update on the department’s RFID initiative: the DOD is ready to accept RFID-tagged shipments.
RFID hit the U.S. mainstream last week when media outlets across the country reported on the controversy surrounding a California elementary school’s student tagging initiative.
Leaders of the U.S. Department of Defense’s RFID efforts say they are moving forward aggressively with both passive and active RFID rollouts.
The company’s RFID starter bundles have been redesigned for smaller CPG and drug makers and include support for DOD suppliers.
By equipping casinos with RFID readers and RFID-tagged chips, the gambling industry will be able to vastly improve its scam detection and marketing capabilities.
A recent survey by consultancy Capgemini of 2,000 British, French, German, and Dutch revealed that European public concern regarding retail use of RFID is high.
An executive of Coors Brewing Co. spells out the unique problems beer manufacturers face in meeting RFID mandates.
Berkeley Public Library is implementing an RFID tracking system that will see all half-million of its books tagged before going live in June.
Forbes magazine has just published a list of the eight “hottest executive jobs of 2005,” and none other than RFID Strategist is named, with a starting annual salary of $250,000.
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