| [11/16/09] |
Rosy Blue Jewels Make Their RFID Debut With TAGIT ICE
Gold and diamonds pass through the hands of Rosy Blue at all stages of the jewellery life cycle. Rosy Blue Diamond jewellery unveiled their successful RFID initiative in the Dubai International Jewellery Week. The rosy blue stand in the exhibition had 7000 tagged items which were all counted on the hour every hour by TAGIT RFID Mobile Unit. |
Hassan Bin Jamil |
| [11/09/09] |
Zenius Enables NFC Payment on GSM Phones
Last month, Silicon Valley based Zenius Solutions announced the integration of its ZeniusMobilePay software with Bladox 's Waver product to enable GSM phones to make secure payment |
Jim |
| [10/26/09] |
Combo HF/UHF and sensor tags in 2010 will change RFID
Talk about Gen 2 or even Gen 3 all you want. There is no doubt ratification of the EPC Global Class 1, Generation 2 standards in December 2004 were a watershed event in the RFID revolution. The next giant RFID game changers are about to be introduced next year. |
Andy Kowl |
| [08/03/09] |
Amreyah\'s Cement Uses RFID to Dispatching Operations
Amreyah Cimpor Cement Company implemented SLV Cement solution to automatically manage weighing, logistics and dispatching operations in its cement plant at Alexandria, Egypt. |
Cachapuz |
| [10/17/08] |
Reik Read Offers Insights on RFID Technology
Reik Read, a Senior Research Analyst on Baird's Equity Research team, recently shared his insights on RFID technology and the companies that provide it: |
Reik Read |
| [07/07/08] |
Billions at stake, RFID busts fuel thieves
With gas prices skyrocketing above $4 per gallon and analysts yesterday predicting $200 barrels by 2010, the ripple effect is causing chaos around the globe. These new price points are the catalyst on everything from the cost of corn to national security. |
Erik Wood, SB Roving Editor |
| [05/02/08] |
RFID Security and Privacy in Retail Applications
When properly implemented, RFID technology can harvest all of these benefits, but RFID doesn't always come without its fair share of issues. Improperly executed systems can lead to backlash caused by both privacy and security issues. Each creates roadblocks to widespread adoption, and in an industry such as retail, customer satisfaction and inventory visibility are critical to profit and growth. |
Andrew Strauch, Vice President, MIKOH |
| [03/24/08] |
Part II: Resellers Receive Tepid Welcome
Everyone knows the 80/20 Rule. It is right up there with Murphy\'s Law and other immutable forces of nature. For you youngsters, so you do not have to ask, it means that 80% of your sales come from 20% of your customers. The reason everyone knows this is that, allowing for fuzzy math, it is always true. |
Andy Kowl |
| [03/14/08] |
Part I: 80/20 Rule and the Two-Percenters
Everyone knows the 80/20 Rule. It is right up there with Murphy\'s Law and other immutable forces of nature. For you youngsters, so you do not have to ask, it means that 80% of your sales come from 20% of your customers. The reason everyone knows this is that, allowing for fuzzy math, it is always true. |
Andy Kowl |
| [01/11/08] |
Cryptography in Hardware Logic Delivers Security and Privacy in RFID
For many years now, RFID technology has been touted the next ubiquitous technology to revolutionize the human way of life in many aspects. However, widespread adoption has been slow due to concerns with security and privacy. Passive RFID tags with built-in hardware cryptography for mutual authentication and encryption capabilities offer security and privacy assurances that may alleviate these concerns. |
Eustace Asanghanwa, Atmel |
| [10/26/07] |
Tag Knowledge (Part III) - Tag Performance
The Passport to RFID+ Certification is an unconventional book. Not so much for the name and the way it takes the reader through various stages of the \"journey\" and provides itineraries, travel advisories, local lingo and other elements the traveler though the \"jungle of the preparation for the RFID+ certification\" may find useful. It is aimed at the real life, real applications and common RFID installations and provides tips and best practices that are used in the RFID industry today. |
Mike Meyers and RFID4U |
| [10/12/07] |
Tag Knowledge (Part II) - Tag Types
The Passport to RFID+ Certification is an unconventional book. Not so much for the name and the way it takes the reader through various stages of the \"journey\" and provides itineraries, travel advisories, local lingo and other elements the traveler though the \"jungle of the preparation for the RFID+ certification\" may find useful. It is aimed at the real life, real applications and common RFID installations and provides tips and best practices that are used in the RFID industry today. |
Mike Meyers and RFID4U |
| [09/21/07] |
Tag Knowledge (Part I) - Tag Components and Construction
The Passport to RFID+ Certification is an unconventional book. Not so much for the name and the way it takes the reader through various stages of the \"journey\" and provides itineraries, travel advisories, local lingo and other elements the traveler though the \"jungle of the preparation for the RFID+ certification\" may find useful. It is aimed at the real life, real applications and common RFID installations and provides tips and best practices that are used in the RFID industry today. |
Mike Meyers and RFID4U |
| [08/03/07] |
Beaver Street Fisheries Nets Improved Logistics Efficiency with Gen 2 RFID Print-and-Apply System
When Wal-Mart announced its phased RFID implementation initiative, requiring the top 100 suppliers to apply RFID labels to shipments starting in January 2005, Beaver Street Fisheries, a fish and seafood distributor in Jacksonville, Florida stepped into high gear. Although Beaver Street is not one of Wal-Mart's top suppliers and had until 2006 to comply, the company challenged itself to exceed expectations and be part of the first wave.
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Matt Ream, Zebra Technologies |
| [07/27/07] |
What is ticket to smart card success in public transport systems?
Whatever reason they travel, it is obvious that for those living in a city, where a contactless smart card scheme is deployed, the contactless smart card (CSC) in their wallet provides them with a simple, convenient and user-friendly solution, which makes their mobility and life much easier, safer and enjoyable. |
Martin Gruber, Marketing Management, NXP |
| [06/22/07] |
Realizing the Sensor Enabled World
The opportunity for these technologies to revolutionize the way that data is captured and processed within business environments is emerging more broadly and can be realized today. Sensor technologies allow for different information to be captured from a variety of sources. |
John Trigg, Progress Software |
| [05/21/07] |
TAGSYS Goes Different Path in RFID: Interview with Fred Kohout
MoreRFID.com recently had an interview from Fred Kohout, Chief Marketing Officer, TAGSYS RFID, about recent development in TAGSYS. |
MoreRFID |
| [05/11/07] |
Texas Radio Frequency Center Pushes the Wireless Frontier
Have you ever wandered what happens when wireless technology meets product innovation? Take a peek at a Texas-based university research center and see products created from the intersection of wireless, academia and industry in the Dallas-Ft.Worth area. |
Mark Johnson, RFID Tribe |
| [05/07/07] |
The importance of adopting SOA in RFID Deployments
SOA can be a vital ingredient for the success of RFID deployments. The principles and methodology suggested by SOA are very useful in building a scalable IT infrastructure to derive value from RFID deployments. |
Arnab Ghosh, CTO, Torry Harris Business Solutions |
| [04/09/07] |
Intel Eyes on RFID: Interview with Kerry Krause
MoreRFID.com recently interviewed Kerry Krause, Marketing Director of Intel\'s RFID Operation, on Intel\'s recently announced UHF RFID reader radio chip - the Intel R1000.
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MoreRFID |