|
| [02/16/09] |
 |
RFID Technology Enabled Library Management System
RFID technology can fully automate various transactions happening within a Campus. Students, teachers and staff can be provided with RFID smart cards for their attendance and access to various labs and library. Library systems can also be automated by using RFID which can include issuing of books, security gates, searching of books, etc. Assets like computers, electronic equipment and mechanical tools which are constantly on the go for student experiments can be tracked to improve their usage by various departments. Hostel can also be better managed with access control system installed for students. |
RapidRadio Solutions |
| [12/03/07] |
 |
Document tracking with PJM
PJM StackTag technology allows for reliable document tracking. It is unique in its capability to communicate with hundreds of tightly stacked tags that have virtually no separation, like RFID tags on single page documents. With the PJM anti-collision protocol it is possible to manage more than 16,000 tagged pages or files per reader at identification speeds of 700 tags per second. Magellan offers a wide range of specific PJM StackTag labels and dedicated reader products to track thousand of documents through office and archive environments. |
Magellan Technology |
| [11/26/07] |
 |
Pharmaceutical item level tagging
PJM technology meets all performance and robustness requirements for the healthcare industry today. It is unique in its capability to identify closely stacked RFID tags even with close proximity to metals, glass or liquids and its anti-collision method allows for identification of large quantities of moving items at rates beyond 600 items per second. PJM offers the reliable issuing of products on high speed conveyors, writing unique 128 bit identification numbers to individual items, at speeds of more than 3000 items per minute. Security features like unique chip IDs etc. offer a wide portfolio of functions to protect against counterfeiting. |
Magellan Technology |
| [11/12/07] |
 |
Dot Micro-Wireless Technology for Business Activity Monitoring
Axcess International announced its micro-wireless technology platform called Dot, the world's smallest, most powerful, lowest cost battery-powered wireless computer. It provides a dynamic view into the status of every "thing" operating in the enterprise and how each thing contributes to the goals of the enterprise.
By enabling automatic sensing, identification and assessment of business activity in real time, the Dot chip provides for improved productivity, security and revenue growth by delivering wireless intelligence unattainable until now. Dot-based solutions exemplify what industry analyst firm Forrester Research calls "The Extended Internet" market, forecasted to grow to $11.6 billion by 2012. |
Axcess International |
| [04/09/07] |
 |
The Intel UHF RFID Transceiver R1000
The Intel UHF RFID Transceiver R1000 provides unprecedented levels of design flexibility by integrating approximately 90 percent of the discrete components found in a typical RFID reader radio (including receive, transmit, baseband, modulation and demodulation functionality) onto a single chip. The Intel R1000 delivers high performance with significantly lower power consumption, supporting a full range of reader form factors and applications, from short-range handheld readers to long-range dock door readers. |
Intel |
| [10/03/06] |
 |
RFID: ID Card: ChipSharingDemo
|
Infineon |
| [09/28/06] |
 |
RFID: Infineon Bulk Identification System
|
Infineon |
| [09/25/06] |
 |
RFID: Infineon Luggage Identification System
|
Infineon |
| [09/20/06] |
 |
RFID: City Library, Identification System, Vienna, Austria
|
Infineon |
| [04/18/06] |
 |
UHF Gen 2 for the Distribution Center
Come inside the Impinj Innovation Lab, where we've created a portal that simulates a dock door configuration typical of what you'd find in a distribution center. We show that, consistent with the way a Gen 2 system is supposed to operate, the Speedway readers are neither required to, nor do they use, synchronization or LBT techniques. You'll see that Speedway readers, operating in Gen 2's dense-reader mode, perform flawlessly in a harsh RF environment reading 40 cases of Caress soap stacked on a fast-moving pallet. Speedway's superior sensitivity and interference rejection combined with the high receptivity of Monza tags yields Gen 2 RFID the way it's supposed to be. |
Impinj |
|
|