Transforming the Warehouse
To reduce inventory, companies are going to have to do a lot more than slap RFID tags on pallets and readers on dock doors.
To reduce inventory, companies are going to have to do a lot more than slap RFID tags on pallets and readers on dock doors.
eLSG.SkyChefs and Scanpak offer the airline catering industry a way to track food carts anywhere in the world.
Infineon Technologies has teamed with two other German companies to create an intelligent license tag, or “iltag.”
The film company has backed the Auto-ID Center because it believes RFID can have significant benefits for manufacturers.
Confusion about low-cost tags, cutbacks in capital spending and a lack of skilled integrators is limited demand.
RFID is being used in attractions and as a convenient way to pay for everything from lockers to refreshments.
Implementing a successful RFID system will take more than money – it will require vision. Savvy companies will develop a long-term strategy that they can implement step by step.
It’s time for companies to begin developing a long-term strategy for using RFID and a plan for deploying it in stages.
CEO Cliff Horwitz recently spoke to RFID Journal about the need for standards and the growth of the industry.
Network software “worked as designed,” but only 78 percent of the off-the-shelf tags were read during the trial.