The Best Get Better
Introducing the winners of the 2010 RFID Journal Awards.
Introducing the winners of the 2010 RFID Journal Awards.
Almacafe, the warehousing subsidiary of the National Federation of Coffee Growers of Colombia, tracks specialty coffee beans to better compete in the global market.
A patient-tracking system at the Disney Family Cancer Center improves services and reduces anxiety for those undergoing treatment.
Impinj’s new Monza 4 tag chips promise to improve read rates and enhance data security.
In the land of the midnight sun, RFID never sleeps, as it streamlines year-round production and shipping at a Norwegian manufacturer’s slate facility.
This year’s RFID Journal Award winners reflect how the radio frequency identification industry has matured.
Sanjay Sarma is the recipient of the first RFID Journal Special Achievement Award.
Milk-products producer Fonterra and dairy lab SAITL are saving time and money by using passive 13.56 MHz tags to identify batches of milk from farm to factory, and test samples for safety and quality.
The technology promises a range of benefits to businesses and consumers, as well as a few challenges.
RFID is not really about connecting objects to the Internet; it’s about capturing data needed to manage things that aren’t being managed today.