Technology Serves to Improve Business
The most successful companies, both among RFID users and technology deployers, know how to investigate and discover changes in processes.
The most successful companies, both among RFID users and technology deployers, know how to investigate and discover changes in processes.
The TurboTrack system employs a standard tag and interrogator, as well as a “helper” antenna device that pulses short signals to pinpoint the locations of even fast-moving tags at the sub-centimeter level.
The company has launched a new ecommerce website that enables users to buy a wide variety of tags and readers.
The manufacturer will present a case study revealing how it is preventing errors using RFID technology.
As the edge becomes the heart of the Internet of Things, there is a need for true expertise to win through.
Using Somark Innovation’s SensaLab solution, laboratories can read and write data from and to an ultra-small UHF RFID tag embedded in the base of an animal’s tail, without requiring technicians to remove the animal from its cage or handle it.
The technology is evolving in new and innovative ways.
FEIG Electronics has released a UHF RFID antenna capable of surviving the worst weather and harshest conditions, such as suspended over winter highways or on airport concourses—or even when collided into in port storage yards.
The company will sponsor RFID Journal’s 17th annual conference and exhibition, to be held on Apr. 2-4 in Phoenix, as well as the LIVE! Retail @ RetailX event, slated for June 25-27 in Chicago.
The retailer has deployed an RFID solution from Nedap across its 200 Nordic stores, enabling it to display in-store products to online shoppers, thereby making both online and physical shopping easier and more efficient.