Free Advice for RFID Vendors
I was recently asked if it is time to invest heavily in the RFID market. Here is my answer.
I was recently asked if it is time to invest heavily in the RFID market. Here is my answer.
I was recently asked if it is time to invest heavily in the RFID market. Here is my answer.
The system would enable physicians or therapists to capture sophisticated data about an individual’s expended energy, based on the movement, angle and relative position of three EPC Gen 2 RFID tags worn on that person’s body.
The conference, focusing on how companies in the defense industry can benefit from utilizing active and passive RFID systems, is to be held near Washington, D.C., on Nov. 30, 2010.
Or maybe it’s just getting warmer—but I’m seeing a lot of anecdotal evidence that interest in the technology is growing.
The company is using EPC Gen 2 tags to track kegs of its Silvertap wines—which are sold by the glass at restaurants and bars—as they leave its cellars, as well as empty containers as they arrive and are then cleaned and refilled.
At a gathering of some of the leading technology and service providers, there was optimism about the growth of the RFID industry.
The system’s developer says the RFID software designed for blind users is not only effective, it’s an improvement on its original RFID software.