Similar Articles |
|
Military & Aerospace Electronics September 2005 Ben Ames |
Pentagon continues its push on suppliers to use RFID All Defense Department suppliers are required to attach radio-frequency-identification (RFID) tags to all their products and technology by 2007. |
InternetNews January 20, 2006 Ed Sutherland |
RFID May See 'Explosive' Growth Although tiny in size, radio frequency identification tags expect huge growth over the next five years. |
National Defense July 2004 Sandra I. Erwin |
Tagging War Shipments: Far More Complicated Task Than Expected By January 2005, all shipments of military equipment and supplies destined for Iraq or other battle zones must be labeled with an electronic tag that helps track the content of each box or package. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics October 2005 |
Lightweight RFID Tracking System for Military Users Savi Technology is releasing the Portable Deployment Kit (PDK), a compact radio frequency identification (RFID) device that can track critical supplies for the military in real time. |
National Defense October 2004 Sandra I. Erwin |
Pentagon Officials Refining Requirements For Smart Tags on Military Shipments The Defense Department is banking on the success of a new smart-tag technology to improve the management and tracking of shipments moving in and out of major depots. |
PC World July 2003 Andrew Brandt |
Privacy Watch: Tracked by the Shirt on Your Back? Radio frequency technology has the potential to identify us all. |
InternetNews December 16, 2004 Eric Griffith |
Zigbee (Almost) Arrives The low-power, low-cost wireless finally has an official specification, but don't believe the hype of all the players--no one has real Zigbee chips or products just yet. |
National Defense May 2007 Sandra I. Erwin |
Tracking Military Supplies No Longer Requires RFID The Defense Department has relaxed a mandate that all food, equipment and other provisions to the U.S. military have radio-frequency identification tags on their products. |
Entrepreneur May 2007 Amanda C. Kooser |
Tag, You're It You can be RFID-compliant, even on a tight budget. |
IndustryWeek September 22, 2010 |
No Slowdown for RFID Roughly 2.3 billion RFID tags will be sold in 2010, up from 1.9 billion in 2009. |
Food Processing January 2005 Judy Rice |
RFID on your package: No pain, no gain? Implementation of radio frequency identification technology isn't as simple as just slapping an RFID tag on a shipping case or pallet. Here are the critical considerations before implementing this technology ... and some available outside help. |
InternetNews June 17, 2005 Colin C. Haley |
Sean Campbell, RFID Leader, IBM Business Consulting Big Blue's RFID point man tabs the industries making the best use of the technology and discusses some of the remaining challenges. |
Home Toys October 2005 Adams & Nguyen |
HomeToys Interview: Panasonic Adopts ZigBee via Freescale's Platform ZigBee technology is intended to take much of the pain and difficulty out of adding short-range, robust wireless to products that once relied upon expensive wiring or proprietary radios. |
CFO September 1, 2004 John Goff |
Dude, Where's My Printer? RFID technology may someday revolutionize how companies track their products. But problems still lie ahead in adopting workable systems. |
National Defense February 2011 James R. Giermanski |
Military Supply Chain Tracking System Both Inefficient and Dangerous The U.S. system of technology and regulations falls apart because the Defense Department uses RFID systems to control and monitor its global container movement. The application of this technology to track cargo overseas is inefficient, dangerous and fundamentally flawed. |
CIO February 15, 2003 John Edwards |
Tag, You're It RFID technology provides fast, reliable asset identification and management. |
CIO January 1, 2003 Ben Worthen |
Bar Codes on Steroids Radio Frequency identification (RFID) tags are like bar codes on steroids; they're to traditional SKUs what Robocop was to your ordinary cop on the beat. |
PC Magazine October 28, 2003 |
The Lookout: A Fix for RFID Researchers at RSA Security's lab have come up with a technique they say will eliminate many of the privacy concerns surrounding the use of RFID (radio frequency identification) tags. |
The Motley Fool January 3, 2005 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
RFID Signal Strong in 2005 Radio Frequency Identification technology is going to ring in the new year in more ways than one. Think you should follow suit as an investor? |
InternetNews July 14, 2004 Roy Mark |
Privacy Groups Tag RFID ACLU, Center for Democracy and Technology push for baseline privacy legislation. |
HBS Working Knowledge February 2, 2004 Sean Silverthorne |
RFID: The Promise (and Danger) of Smart Barcodes Thanks to Wal-Mart, we all have heard about radio frequency identification. Now RFID tags are set to pop up on everything from razor blades to cattle. |
The Motley Fool March 15, 2005 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
RFID Signal Strong in 2005 Radio frequency identification is going to be huge this year. Investors, take note. |
IndustryWeek January 1, 2008 David Blanchard |
Lack of Standards Is Slowing Adoption of RFID for Cargo Security The U.S. government has been slow to issue any kind of mandate regarding the implementation of RFID on cargo containers. |
InternetNews June 14, 2005 Colin C. Haley |
No Substitute For RFID 'Launch and Learn' When it comes to radio frequency identification systems, there's no substitute for trial and error. |
IEEE Spectrum October 2006 Jon Adams & Bob Heile |
Busy as a ZigBee Now that you've finally installed Wi-Fi, get ready for a second home network -- one that will control the house itself |
The Motley Fool December 9, 2004 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
The A to Z of RFID While consumers will grow to appreciate the RFID advantage, investors should aim closer to the vest to cash in on the RFID revolution. |
The Motley Fool February 20, 2007 Jack Uldrich |
Hitachi's RFID Takes a Powder Dust-sized RFID tag technology raises interesting possibilities. Is now the time for investors to buy in? Probably, but questions remain. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics August 2006 |
VDC Analysts Say RFID Industry Activity is on the Rise The surge of corporate and financial activity within the radio frequency identification (RFID) industry is a signal that the investment community believes that the potential of RFID will become a near-to-mid-term reality, reports market researchers. |
CFO July 1, 2005 John Edwards |
At Home with RFID Radio frequency tags could prove to be a boon for tracking corporate assets -- including people. |
CIO June 15, 2004 Ben Worthen |
RFID Laws on Deck With widespread adoption of radio frequency identification (RFID) tags under way, privacy advocates are pushing for regulations on these tiny computer chips that can track information about the products they are attached to. |
InternetNews December 23, 2005 Sean Michael Kerner |
ZigBee Goes to Texas Texas Instruments acquires Chipcon for $200 million. |
CIO August 18, 2008 Thomas Wailgum |
These Boots Were Made for Tracking: Nine West Tries On RFID Strategy Footwear giant Nine West joins a long list of retailers in search of the RFID Holy Grail: item-level RFID tracking. Will the move be a good fit? Even the mighty Wal-Mart has struggled to cash in on this technology. |
PC Magazine November 5, 2003 |
RFID: Promise and Peril If you're wearing or carrying anything with an embedded RFID tag, you could conceivably be tracked wherever you go. |
National Defense May 2005 Harold Kennedy |
Electronic Tags Companies that supply military equipment to the Defense Department should begin voluntarily to put electronic tags on shipments, advised the assistant deputy undersecretary of defense for supply-chain integration. |
IndustryWeek January 1, 2009 David Blanchard |
The Five Stages of RFID As manufacturers come to accept the inevitability of RFID, they are also discovering some tangible benefits. |
IndustryWeek December 1, 2003 Traci Purdum |
Technologies Of The Year -- RFID In A Box Manhattan Associates designs a pre-configured solution. |
BusinessWeek July 14, 2003 Khermouch & Green |
Bar Codes Better Watch Their Backs New retail technologies have a way of lingering in dreamland until discount colossus Wal-Mart decides it's time for everyone to wake up. The alarm clock in Bentonville, Ark., just went off again, this time for a successor to bar codes called Radio Frequency Identification. |
Home Toys April 2005 Raoul Wijgergangs |
Making Sense of Today's Home Control Technologies The Z-Wave protocol is designed for residential control systems. Typically these systems have between five and two hundred plus nodes, distributed around the home and garden. The system is designed for easy installation because homeowners install and manage the system themselves. |
InternetNews March 17, 2006 Tim Scannell |
Are RFID Tags Vulnerable to Viruses? Dutch researchers claim RFID technology is open to hacker attacks and disruptive viruses. What's the answer? |
InternetNews January 27, 2006 Susan Kuchinskas |
Bob Metcalfe, Chairman, Interim CEO, Ember Internet pioneer Bob Metcalfe takes networking to the sensor level. |
InternetNews January 23, 2004 Susan Kuchinskas |
ZigBee Key to Jetsons-style Living Two-way, low-data-rate chips will be central to the connected home of the future, say analysts. |
Home Toys December 2004 |
HomeToys Interview The ZigBee Alliance is an association of companies working together to enable wirelessly networked monitoring and control products based on an open global standard. |
Food Engineering February 8, 2006 Kevin T. Higgins |
RFID Making the Right Moves Despite the glitches, many food companies are proceeding with RFID implementations, convinced the technology will pay off long term. |
Food Engineering January 1, 2006 |
RFID Spending Expected to Surpass $3 Billion Significant amounts of data can be stored on RFID tags. Food processors will need to develop new business applications if they want to put RFID at the center of a process. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics July 2006 |
Demand Expected to Jump for RFID Tags The spread and use of RFID in most sectors will largely be determined by cost, and the cost is dropping quickly. |