LIVE! Goes Live Again
RFID Journal LIVE! will be held in Phoenix on Sept. 26-28, with special health and safety protocols in place, and that’s good news for both buyers and sellers of RFID solutions.
RFID Journal LIVE! will be held in Phoenix on Sept. 26-28, with special health and safety protocols in place, and that’s good news for both buyers and sellers of RFID solutions.
Implementing RFID technology into a business can have huge benefits in the long run and allow a competitive edge, especially as the industry emerges from pandemic-induced disruption.
Definitive Technology Group built a solution for an online retailer and is now marketing it for use by warehouses, data centers and healthcare facilities to capture inventory counts faster and more effectively than with handhelds.
Zyter offers IoT solution for smart factories; ToolWatch, DeWalt partner on tool-management tech; Semtech, InVue collaborate on LoRaWAN products for retail; NiceLabel releases study on production line shutdowns; OnAsset Intelligence unveils supply chain monitoring system with LoRaWAN; Essence Group expands sustainable IoT efforts; CESMII awards smart manufacturing project to Litmus.
This weekend’s feature story will explore how a classic science fiction comedy accurately foresaw the rise of drones, smart homes, automated stores and other Internet of Things technologies, decades before such innovations became a reality.
The system, utilizing technology from Trimble and Confidex, is intended to help businesses boost efficiency and productivity, increase asset visibility and automate farm operations.
Pebblebee, founded by engineers and close friends at Boeing, is launching its vision of a tracker for important personal goods, assets or pets, with a private IoT network and platform provided by Soracom.
Bosch is implementing an Internet of Things solution that tracks the conditions of cold chain loads in real time, from the point of manufacture to the point of use.
It’s not just about capacity—the key is business continuity, during and beyond the pandemic.
The MIT Media Lab system employs computer vision, focused by RFID technology, to enable a robot to find a specific item in a complex environment, then pick it up and place it according to instructions for shipping, sorting or manufacturing.