The Problem Solvers
Systems integrators help clients create the RFID solutions that will meet their business needs, while getting disparate components to function together seamlessly and cost-efficiently.
Systems integrators help clients create the RFID solutions that will meet their business needs, while getting disparate components to function together seamlessly and cost-efficiently.
Whatever your RFID application, there’s nothing worse than having to change partners in the middle of a deployment.
The horsemeat scandal engulfing Europe is evidence that the global food supply chain is just too complex to monitor without RFID and other technologies.
The London startup focuses on Near Field Communication RFID tags and services designed to help its clients—retailers and product marketers—learn more about consumer behavior.
The company is writing to high-memory tags on two parts destined for Airbus from three of its manufacturing facilities, with plans to tag additional components by the end of the year.
The U.K. facility has deployed Stanley Healthcare’s AeroScout Wi-Fi-based real-time location system to enable software to pinpoint the location of assets.
U.K. retailer John Lewis trials ZBD’s electronic signs, displays; Novadis unveils rubber-encased UHF tag for harsh environments; RF Technologies consolidates product offerings; Danish agency seeks tenders for auto-ID and tracking in hospitals; MasterCard announces contactless-payments gains in Asia Pacific, Middle East and Africa.
The University of Arkansas’ RFID Research Center will show how retailers and suppliers can benefit from RFID applications.
The wireless sensor tag, developed by Cambridge Consultants, could be placed in a parcel prior to shipment and interrogated via a smartphone to learn if the contents suffered any impacts.
The company offers RFID-based solutions in South Africa that enable users to share photos and “likes” via Facebook, Twitter and similar sites; clients include Sunglass Hut.