RFID Touted for Tote Tracking
Beal Solutions, a logistics company that manages the movement of reusable totes, plans to incorporate RFID into its supply chain operations.
Beal Solutions, a logistics company that manages the movement of reusable totes, plans to incorporate RFID into its supply chain operations.
SmartCode, an Israeli company, says it can produce 1.2 million RFID tags per hour. Each would cost less than ten cents when ordered in volume.
The MultiScanner RFID reader can automate the receiving and dispatching of goods.
Updated: At a store in Germany, the European retailer and its partners will learn whether RFID can reduce out of stocks.
You’d never know it from the press coverage, but RFID offers many consumer benefits.
IBM will soon pilot a system that uses RFID to help banks identify and better serve their customers.
Intrinsically safe RFID technology for tracking field equipment can be used in harsh environments.
Lionize Logistics says an RFID pilot that automated the receiving of goods exceeded all its expectations.
Mario Cardullo received the first patent for a passive, read-write RFID tag. He tells how he came up with the idea in 1969.
Syscan’s compact flash reader, which plugs into almost any handheld computer, will cost $150 and read 13.56 MHz ISO-compliant tags.