MetraLabs’ TORY RFID Inventory Robot Celebrates First Jubilee
One year ago, German retailer Adler started using the robot for automated inventory at one of its stores.
One year ago, German retailer Adler started using the robot for automated inventory at one of its stores.
The company has developed the device in conjunction with Professor Marcel Meli and Zurich University of Applied Sciences Institute of Embedded Systems.
The company is signaling a more service-based approach to the health-care market with a package of services that include calibration of environmental RTLS tags, asset tag management—including battery replacement—proactive onsite services for infant protection and other critical or safety-based tags, and analytics for future improvements of RTLS deployments.
This past summer, Ottawa’s Ultimate Fighting Championship Fan Village found that participants using NFC-enabled technology from XOLUTION had higher game participation rates, and also shared event-based information via social networks about 5,000 times.
The TSU111 helps reduce the size and energy needs of analog circuits in medical monitors, wearable electronics, gas detectors, pH sensors, infrared motion sensors and payment tags.
Semtech, a supplier of analog and mixed-signal semiconductors, has announced that its LoRa wireless RF technology is being used in Trimble’s new Telog 41 Series of wireless Internet of Things sensors for remotely measuring, monitoring and analyzing water, wastewater and groundwater systems.
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The Domaine Henri Rebourseau winery uses the InTact capsules to protect its brand from counterfeiters by uniquely identifying every bottle of burgundy and detecting whether the capsule has been removed and replaced, to ensure that no bottles have been opened and their wine potentially replaced.
The newly introduced Amazon Go concept store appears to use RFID, video, Bluetooth and artificial intelligence to enable shoppers to simply walk into a store, pick up items and walk back out again.
Too many retailers do not want to face the truth—or do not know the truth—about their inventory accuracy problems.