News

Three months ago, a group of European companies launched a two-year project intended to showcase the potential benefits of radio frequency identification for small and midsize enterprises (SMEs).
Three years ago, amid the gold-rush mentality spawned by RFID mandates from the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) and retail behemoths Wal-Mart and Target, Miles Technologies--like many of its peers ...
Darren Brookes, operations director of Sovereign Security, a security service in Nottingham, England, wanted to develop a radio frequency identification system that could pinpoint the location of ...
The trial is being conducted with a handful of suppliers and EPCglobal Inc., the standards group spearheading RFID adoption. "We're just about to enter the next phase where those suppliers will push ...
Case study: TNT project helps prevent delays at Ford plant TNT Logistics is hoping RFID technologies will slash costs by preventing delays and reducing inventory for Ford's newest truck plant. The ...
It’s not a question of if but when radio frequency identification, or RFID, technology will dominate the supply chains of manufacturers, retailers and just about any company or organization that needs ...
UW Libraries is improving your library experience by implementing Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) tags across our physical collections. This upgrade will make self-checkout faster, streamline ...
The use of electronic-ticketing systems in Germany’s huge mass transit sector is moving forward after the successful testing of a smart-card system that uses radio frequency identification (RFID).
A location-based services trial that will see a famous Tokyo neighborhood blanketed with about 10,000 RFID tags and other beacons got its start earlier this month. The Tokyo Ubiquitous Network Project ...
China’s Ministry of Public Security (MPS), which oversees the country’s police force, plans to issue more than 1.3 billion second-generation resident identification cards based on RFID (radio ...
A location-based services trial that will see a famous Tokyo neighborhood blanketed with around 10,000 RFID (radio frequency identification) tags and other beacons got its start earlier this month.