Density Brings Traffic Counting to New Venues
Using a simple infrared sensor, the startup is providing real-time traffic counts to small brick-and-mortar merchants—but is finding interest from other sectors as well.
Using a simple infrared sensor, the startup is providing real-time traffic counts to small brick-and-mortar merchants—but is finding interest from other sectors as well.
Using a simple infrared sensor, the startup is providing real-time traffic counts to small brick-and-mortar merchants—but is finding interest from other sectors as well.
There is no single path to securing mobile devices and networks. This article, the second in our three-part series, focuses on how one startup company is leveraging blockchain technology and a type of cryptography called telehash.
Thus far in 2015, three major research reports that probed the Internet of Things came to similar conclusions: The Industrial IoT is where the rubber meets the road.
Thousands of the company’s new Fit tags are already being deployed in manufacturing and health-care settings.
Internet of Things technology has implications across IT organizations, from day-to-day tasks to more fundamental shifts.
The San Diego medical facility is now using MEPS’ Virtual Logbook, in conjunction with the company’s Intelliguard Kit and Tray Management System, to enable personnel to more quickly find RFID-tagged medications when they’re needed elsewhere, or if any are recalled or nearing their expiration dates.
The startup, which uses a network of sensors and adjustable vents to control room-level temperature, has just received a large investment from Emerson’s Climate Technologies business arm.
It’s driving me crazy that RFID vendors don’t understand how to find companies that are looking for their products.
The idea is to integrate a passive RFID tag with a liquid-filled vial, so that if frozen, the vial would expand, damaging the antenna enough that the tag would no longer be readable.