duminică, 19 iulie 2009

Guard RFID's TotGuard™ System Now Includes "Mother- Baby Bonding" Using Active RFID

" Hospital Infant Switches Reduced with System to Bond Newborns to Mom

Vancouver, BC (PRWEB) July 12, 2009 -- Guard RFID Solutions Inc. announced today that its leading-edge TotGuard™ Infant Protection system now bonds mothers to their infants using Active RFID tags, as a major feature addition to its infant security solution. Vice President of Sales, Beth Bandi explains, "We have all heard the rare, heartbreaking stories of mothers going home with the wrong baby, but the incidence of mother-baby mix-ups in hospitals is more common and has more costly consequences than one might expect."

TotGuard Active RFID Bonds Mom & Tot

We have all heard the rare, heartbreaking stories of mothers going home with the wrong baby, but the incidence of mother-baby mix-ups in hospitals is more common and has more costly consequences than one might expect.
Lack of validated identity information due to lapses in protocol, mistakes and errors costs hospitals thousands of dollars in time, tests and lost productivity for each occurrence not including the negative effect on reputation
Bandi went on to say that preventing identification errors is a huge issue for hospitals and the populace they serve, especially for infants, the most vulnerable population. "Lack of validated identity information due to lapses in protocol, mistakes and errors costs hospitals thousands of dollars in time, tests and lost productivity for each occurrence not including the negative effect on reputation," says Bandi. She continued by saying that at GuardRFID, we considered the key risks and are proud to have a complete infant security system in TotGuard™ that delivers results.

A 2005 study reported that there are approximately 23,000 erroneous infant-mother transfers per year in the United States alone, and that the vast majority are discovered before discharge, "usually through pure luck". Bandi gave an example of widely reported case where a Mom had to be tested for hepatitis after breastfeeding the wrong baby.

The Mother-Baby Bonding feature within GuardRFID's TotGuard™ solution, and the associated active RFID tags, begin production shipments in October, 2009. Bandi stated that Guard RFID is currently accepting requests for upgrades to existing systems, and is offering the feature as an option system for all new system requirements.

The TotGuard Infant Security system uses the only Disposable Infant Tags on the market, eliminating the need to clean, disinfect and sterilize tags after use, and removing the risk of cross-infection between infants. These small, infant tags utilize Guard RFID's unique dual-tamper detecting mechanism, which is designed to significantly reduce nuisance alarms.

About Guard RFID Solutions

Guard RFID develops Active Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) technologies and products for Healthcare and Enterprise applications. Guard RFID's products provide accurate RF asset tracking and people tracking for healthcare and industrial applications, and are used for enhanced automation, workflow, monitoring and security solutions. Guard RFID's ability to support multiple applications on its Argus [active RFID platform positions the company to be able to offer combined people and asset solutions all on the same infrastructure. Founded in early 2007, Guard RFID introduced the first low-cost disposable Active RFID tags to the market, eliminating the need to recycle tags, and allowing for mass deployment for a reasonable investment. Guard RFID Solutions is federally incorporated in Canada, with its head office in the Province of British Columbia, and its Sales office in Atlanta, GA.

Additional information regarding Guard RFID products and services can be found on its website www.guardrfid.com"

http://www.prweb.com/releases/2009/07/prweb2632224.htm

Government officials say RFID makes life easier, privacy advocates worried

You think !?

"by Associated Press
Sunday July 12, 2009, 12:30 AM
AP PhotoThis is one of Vermont's enhanced driver's licenses.
Government officials say embedding passports, driver's licenses and the like with radio frequency identification, or RFID, is a 21st century application of technology that will make life easier and Americans safer.

But privacy advocates fear that RFID paired with other technologies could make people trackable without their knowledge or consent.

These chips have the potential to make everybody a blip on someone's radar screen, critics say. Some have already begun calling the practice "Little Brother" in a nod to the Big Brother of George Orwell's "1984."

Neville Pattinson, an executive for Gemalto Inc., a major supplier of microchipped cards, says placing RFIDs in driver's licenses and passports makes them vulnerable "to attacks from hackers, identity thieves and possibly even terrorists." More must be done, he says, to protect information linked to the chips.

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security has been promoting the use of RFID, despite warnings from its own advisory committee. To date, about 192,000 enhanced driver's licenses using the chips have been issued in Washington, Vermont, Michigan and New York.

In the video below, a hacker named Chris Paget shows how RFID-embedded identification cards have made it possible for him to collect stranger's information with equipment he bought on eBay for less than $200.
"

Chips in official IDs raise privacy fears

"By TODD LEWAN

Associated Press
Posted: 07/11/2009 09:37:12 AM PDT
Updated: 07/11/2009 09:37:17 AM PDT

Climbing into his Volvo, outfitted with a Matrics antenna and a Motorola reader he'd bought on eBay for $190, Chris Paget cruised the streets of San Francisco with this objective: To read the identity cards of strangers, wirelessly, without ever leaving his car.

It took him 20 minutes to strike hacker's gold.

Zipping past Fisherman's Wharf, his scanner detected, then downloaded to his laptop, the unique serial numbers of two pedestrians' electronic U.S. passport cards embedded with radio frequency identification, or RFID, tags. Within an hour, he'd "skimmed" the identifiers of four more of the new, microchipped PASS cards from a distance of 20 feet.

Embedding identity documents — passports, drivers licenses, and the like — with RFID chips is a no-brainer to government officials. Increasingly, they are promoting it as a 21st century application of technology that will help speed border crossings, safeguard credentials against counterfeiters, and keep terrorists from sneaking into the country.

But Paget's February experiment demonstrated something privacy advocates had feared for years: That RFID, coupled with other technologies, could make people trackable without their knowledge or consent.

He filmed his drive-by heist, and soon his video went viral on the Web, intensifying a debate over a push by government, federal and state, to put tracking technologies in identity documents and over their potential to
Advertisement
erode privacy.

Putting a traceable RFID in every pocket has the potential to make everybody a blip on someone's radar screen, critics say, and to redefine Orwellian government snooping for the digital age.

"Little Brother," some are already calling it — even though elements of the global surveillance web they warn against exist only on drawing boards, neither available nor approved for use.

But with advances in tracking technologies coming at an ever-faster rate, critics say, it won't be long before governments could be able to identify and track anyone in real time, 24-7, from a cafe in Paris to the shores of California.

The key to getting such a system to work, these opponents say, is making sure everyone carries an RFID tag linked to a biometric data file.

On June 1, it became mandatory for Americans entering the United States by land or sea from Canada, Mexico, Bermuda and the Caribbean to present identity documents embedded with RFID tags, though conventional passports remain valid until they expire.

Among new options are the chipped "e-passport," and the new, electronic PASS card — credit-card sized, with the bearer's digital photograph and a chip that can be scanned through a pocket, backpack or purse from 30 feet.

Alternatively, travelers can use "enhanced" driver's licenses embedded with RFID tags now being issued in some border states: Washington, Vermont, Michigan and New York. Texas and Arizona have entered into agreements with the federal government to offer chipped licenses, and the U.S. Department of Homeland Security has recommended expansion to non-border states. Kansas and Florida officials have received DHS briefings on the licenses, agency records show.

The purpose of using RFID is not to identify people, says Mary Ellen Callahan, the chief privacy officer at Homeland Security, but rather "to verify that the identification document holds valid information about you."

Likewise, U.S. border agents are "pinging" databases only to confirm that licenses aren't counterfeited. "They're not pulling up your speeding tickets," she says, or looking at personal information beyond what is on a passport.

The change is largely about speed and convenience, she says. An RFID document that doubles as a U.S. travel credential "only makes it easier to pull the right record fast enough, to make sure that the border flows, and is operational" — even though a 2005 Government Accountability Office report found that government RFID readers often failed to detect travelers' tags.

Such assurances don't persuade those who liken RFID-embedded documents to barcodes with antennas and contend they create risks to privacy that far outweigh the technology's heralded benefits. They warn it will actually enable identity thieves, stalkers and other criminals to commit "contactless" crimes against victims who won't immediately know they've been violated.

Neville Pattinson, vice president for government affairs at Gemalto, Inc., a major supplier of microchipped cards, is no RFID basher. He's a board member of the Smart Card Alliance, an RFID industry group, and is serving on the Department of Homeland Security's Data Privacy and Integrity Advisory Committee.

Still, Pattinson has sharply criticized the RFIDs in U.S. driver's licenses and passport cards. In a 2007 article for the Privacy Advisor, a newsletter for privacy professionals, he called them vulnerable "to attacks from hackers, identity thieves and possibly even terrorists."

RFID, he wrote, has a fundamental flaw: Each chip is built to faithfully transmit its unique identifier "in the clear, exposing the tag number to interception during the wireless communication."

Once a tag number is intercepted, "it is relatively easy to directly associate it with an individual," he says. "If this is done, then it is possible to make an entire set of movements posing as somebody else without that person's knowledge."

Echoing these concerns were the AeA — the lobbying association for technology firms — the Smart Card Alliance, the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, the Business Travel Coalition, and the Association of Corporate Travel Executives.

Meanwhile, Homeland Security has been promoting broad use of RFID even though its own advisory committee on data integrity and privacy warned that radio-tagged IDs have the potential to allow "widespread surveillance of individuals" without their knowledge or consent.

In its 2006 draft report, the committee concluded that RFID "increases risks to personal privacy and security, with no commensurate benefit for performance or national security," and recommended that "RFID be disfavored for identifying and tracking human beings."

For now, chipped PASS cards and enhanced driver's licenses are optional and not yet widely deployed in the United States. To date, roughly 192,000 EDLs have been issued in Washington, Vermont, Michigan and New York.

But as more Americans carry them "you can bet that long-range tracking of people on a large scale will rise exponentially," says Paget, a self-described "ethical hacker" who works as an Internet security consultant.

Could RFID numbers eventually become de facto identifiers of Americans, like the Social Security number?

Such a day is not far off, warns Katherine Albrecht, a privacy advocate and co-author of "Spychips," a book that is sharply critical of the use of RFID in consumer items and official ID documents.

"There's a reason you don't wear your Social Security number across your T-shirt," Albrecht says, "and beaming out your new, national RFID number in a 30-foot radius would be far worse."

There are no federal laws against the surreptitious skimming of Americans' RFID numbers, so it won't be long before people seek to profit from this, says Bruce Schneier, an author and chief security officer at BT, the British telecommunications operator.

Data brokers that compile computer dossiers on millions of individuals from public records, credit applications and other sources "will certainly maintain databases of RFID numbers and associated people," he says. "They'd do a disservice to their stockholders if they didn't."

But Gigi Zenk, a spokeswoman for the Washington state Department of Licensing, says Americans "aren't that concerned about the RFID, particularly in this day and age when there are a lot of other ways to access personal information on people."

Tracking an individual is much easier through a cell phone, or a satellite tag embedded in a car, she says. "An RFID that contains no private information, just a randomly assigned number, is probably one of the least things to be concerned about, frankly."

Still, even some ardent RFID supporters recognize that these next-generation RFID cards raise prickly questions.

Mark Roberti, editor of RFID Journal, an industry newsletter, recently acknowledged that as the use of RFID in official documents grows, the potential for abuse increases.

"A government could do this, for instance, to track opponents," he wrote in an opinion piece discussing Paget's cloning experiment. "To date, this type of abuse has not occurred, but it could if governments fail to take privacy issues seriously."

———

Imagine this: Sensors triggered by radio waves instructing cameras to zero in on people carrying RFID, unblinkingly tracking their movements.

Unbelievable? Intrusive? Outrageous?

Actually, it happens every day and makes people smile — at the Alton Towers amusement park in Britain, which videotapes visitors who agree to wear RFID bracelets as they move about the facility, then sells the footage as a keepsake.

This application shows how the technology can be used effortlessly — and benignly. But critics, noting it can also be abused, say federal authorities in the United States didn't do enough from the start to address that risk.

The first U.S. identity document to be embedded with RFID was the "e-passport."

In the wake of the Sept. 11 attacks — and the finding that some of the terrorists entered the United States using phony passports — the State Department proposed mandating that Americans and foreign visitors carry "enhanced" passport booklets, with microchips embedded in the covers.

The chips, it announced, would store the holder's information from the data page, a biometric version of the bearer's photo, and receive special coding to prevent data from being altered.

In February 2005, when the State Department asked for public comment, it got an outcry: Of the 2,335 comments received, 98.5 percent were negative, with 86 percent expressing security or privacy concerns, the department reported in an October 2005 notice in the Federal Register.

"Identity theft was of grave concern," it stated, adding that "others expressed fears that the U.S. Government or other governments would use the chip to track and censor, intimidate or otherwise control or harm them."

It also noted that many Americans expressed worries "that the information could be read at distances in excess of 10 feet."

Those concerned citizens, it turns out, had cause.

According to department records obtained by researchers at the University of California, Berkeley, under a Freedom of Information Act request and reviewed by the AP, discussion about security concerns with the e-passport occurred as early as January 2003 but tests weren't ordered until the department began receiving public criticism two years later.

When the AP asked when testing was initiated, the State Department said only that "a battery of durability and electromagnetic tests were performed" by the National Institute of Standards and Technology, along with tests "to measure the ability of data on electronic passports to be surreptitiously skimmed or for communications with the chip reader to be eavesdropped," testing which "led to additional privacy controls being placed on U.S. electronic passports ... "

Indeed, in 2005, the department incorporated metallic fibers into the e-passport's front cover, since metal can reduce the range at which RFID can be read. Personal information in the chips was encrypted and a cryptographic "key" added, which required inspectors to optically scan the e-passport first for the chip to communicate wirelessly.

The department also announced it would test e-passports with select employees, before giving them to the public. "We wouldn't be issuing the passports to ourselves if we didn't think they're secure," said Frank Moss, deputy assistant Secretary of State for passport services, in a CNN interview.

But what of Americans' concerns about the e-passport's read range?

In its October 2005 Federal Register notice, the State Department reassured Americans that the e-passport's chip — the ISO 14443 tag — would emit radio waves only within a 4-inch radius, making it tougher to hack.

Technologists in Israel and England, however, soon found otherwise. In May 2006, at the University of Tel Aviv, researchers cobbled together $110 worth of parts from hobbyists kits and directly skimmed an encrypted tag from several feet away. At the University of Cambridge, a student showed that a transmission between an e-passport and a legitimate reader could be intercepted from 160 feet.

The State Department, according to its own records obtained under FOIA, was aware of the problem months before its Federal Register notice and more than a year before the e-passport was rolled out in August 2006.

"Do not claim that these chips can only be read at a distance of 10 cm (4 inches)," Moss wrote in an April 22, 2005, e-mail to Randy Vanderhoof, executive director of the Smart Card Alliance. "That really has been proven to be wrong."

The chips could be skimmed from a yard away, he added — all a hacker would need to read e-passport numbers, say, in an elevator or on a subway.

Other red flags went up. In February 2006, an encrypted Dutch e-passport was hacked on national television, with researchers gaining access to the document's digital photograph, fingerprint and personal data. Then British e-passports were hacked using a $500 reader and software written in less than 48 hours.

The State Department countered by saying European e-passports weren't as safe as their American counterparts because they lacked the cryptographic key and the anti-skimming cover.

But recent studies have shown that more powerful readers can penetrate even the metal sheathing in the U.S. e-passport's cover.

John Brennan, a senior policy adviser at the State Department's Bureau of Consular Affairs, concedes it may be possible for a reader to overpower the e-passport's protective shield from a distance.

However, he adds, "you could not do this in any large-scale, concerted fashion without putting a bunch of infrastructure in place to make it happen. The practical vulnerabilities may be far less than some of the theoretical scenarios that people have put out there."

That thinking is flawed, says Lee Tien, a senior attorney and surveillance expert with the Electronic Frontier Foundation, which opposes RFID in identity documents.

It won't take a massive government project to build reader networks around the country, he says: They will grow organically, for commercial purposes, from convention centers to shopping malls, sports stadiums to college campuses. Federal agencies and law enforcement wouldn't have to control those networks; they already buy information about individuals from commercial data brokers.

"And remember," Tien adds, "technology always gets better ... "

———

With questions swirling around the e-passport's security, why then did the government roll out more RFID-tagged documents — the PASS card and enhanced driver's license, which provide less protection against hackers?

The RFIDs in enhanced driver's licenses and PASS cards are nearly as slim as paper. Each contains a silicon computer chip attached to a wire antenna, which transmits a unique identifier via radio waves when "awakened" by an electromagnetic reader.

The technology they use is designed to track products through the supply chain. These chips, known as EPCglobal Gen 2, have no encryption, and minimal data protection features. They are intended to release their data to any inquiring Gen 2 reader within a 30-foot radius.

This might be appropriate when a supplier is tracking a shipment of toilet paper or dog food; but when personal information is at stake, privacy advocates ask: Is long-range readability truly desirable?

The departments of State and Homeland Security say remotely readable ID cards transmit only RFID numbers that correspond to records stored in government databases, which they say are secure. Even if a hacker were to copy an RFID number onto a blank tag and place it into a counterfeit ID, they say, the forger's face still wouldn't match the true cardholder's photo in the database, rendering it useless.

Still, computer experts such as Schneier say government databases can be hacked. Others worry about a day when hackers might deploy readers at "chokepoints," such as checkout lines, skim RFID numbers from people's driver's licenses, then pair those numbers to personal data skimmed from chipped credit cards (though credit cards are harder to skim). They imagine stalkers using skimmed RFID numbers to track their targets' comings and goings. They fear government agents will compile chip numbers at peace rallies, mosques or gun shows, simply by strolling through a crowd with a reader.

Others worry more about the linking of chips with other identification methods, including biometric technologies, such as facial recognition.

The International Civil Aviation Organization, the U.N. agency that sets global standards for passports, now calls for facial recognition in all scannable e-passports.

Should biometric technologies be coupled with RFID, "governments will have, for the first time in history, the means to identify, monitor and track citizens anywhere in the world in real time," says Mark Lerner, spokesman for the Constitutional Alliance, a network of nonprofit groups, lawmakers and citizens opposed to remotely readable identity and travel documents.

Implausible?

For now, perhaps. Radio tags in EDLs and passport cards can't be scanned miles away.

But scientists are working on technologies that might enable a satellite or a cell tower to scan a chip's contents. Critics also note advances in the sharpness of closed-circuit cameras, and point out they're increasingly ubiquitous. And more fingerprints, iris scans and digitized facial images are being stored in government databases. The FBI has announced plans to assemble the world's largest biometric database, nicknamed "Next Generation Identification."

"RFID's role is to make the collection and transmission of people's biometric data quick, easy and nonintrusive," says Lerner. "Think of it as the thread that ties together the surveillance package.""

http://www.mercurynews.com/breakingnews/ci_12816946?nclick_check=1

duminică, 5 iulie 2009

Customizable RFID 125KHz Tag for Industrial Application

"DAILY RFID has recently announced rugged RFID 125KHz tag, which can be easily integrated into many RFID projects. The 125KHz tag is specially designed for industrial applications especially in harsh environments.

The RFID 125KHz tag is specially designed for industrial applications. Made from PET and pressure sensitive material, it can operate well in harsh environments and resist against abrasion, water and corrosion.

This RFID 125KHz tag can be customized in different sizes and shapes. It is engineered to provide a read range from 3cm to 10cm basing on a normal LF RFID Reader, and max 25-50cm basing on DAILY RFID special reader. And each tag from DAILY has a unique ID code for secure application.

The 125KHz tag has been used in many applications, including RFID asset tracking, library management, logistics and anti-counterfeiting, etc. And it is available with IC chips such as the EM4001, Mifare Family, I-Code,TI 256, etc.

Please visit http://www.rfid-in-china.com/products_682_1.html for more information about RFID 125KHz Tag.

About DAILY RFID CO.,LIMITED
DAILY RFID CO.,LIMITED (http://www.rfid-in-china.com), which belongs to PAN Group Co., ltd, is the leading company focusing on the research and development of EPC & RFID technology in China.

DAILY RFID specialize in producing arguably the world's most extensive line of RFID Tag,RFID Label,Smart Card and RFID Reader, which are suitable for any vertical markets, and have obtained the National Integrated Circuit Card Register Certificate, IC Card Manufacture License and ISO9001 Quality Management System Certification. Also, we own a factory covering an area of 26,000 square meters.

DAILY's products are designed and manufactured with recognized industry standards relevant to RFID and its markets but most notably for use in the demanding environments to recognize and understand your business's RFID needs. We are committed to providing "Innovative Technology", "Superior, Cost-efficient Product" and " Professional, Efficient Customer Services"."

http://pr-usa.net/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=233671&Itemid=33

joi, 2 iulie 2009

Baja Beach Club RFID-implants



"It works for Fido, so why not you?

The same RFID implants used to identify lost pets are now being adapted for use on you and me, and not how one might have originally expected. As with all pioneering technologies, it's leisure pursuits that are getting the first stab at the tech.

Specifically: One beach-oriented Barcelona nightclub, the Baja Beach Club, is using the implants to free customers of the burdens of having to carry their purses or wallets. Makes sense: When you're spending the day in a bikini and flip-flops, where do you keep your ID? Instead, the bouncer just scans your arm with an RFID reader, and you're in. And since you can't carry a credit card or cash either, the implants do double duty: You can pay for drinks with a quick scan of the chip. Chipped patrons also gain access to VIP areas of the club.

The implant procedure is simple and mostly painless (except for all the legal paperwork required): The area where the chip is injected is thoroughly numbed, then the glass capsule is injected beneath a layer of skin and fat on the arm.

It's an interesting experiment, and I'm intrigued to see whether the idea will catch on. The catch, of course, becomes what will happen if a lot of clubs in one area decide to do this. One RFID chip under the skin is probably an interesting conversation piece. A dozen in one arm might make you walk funny. Obviously the one-chip-per-establishment system isn't really sustainable in the long run.

Could someone come along and develop a broad human RFID chip standard? Such plans have been being talked about for years, but nothing much has ever come of it. Naturally, security implications are huge: RFID tags can be scanned, copied, and altered by savvy hackers, and it would be a simple matter for a wily crook to scan people en masse as they pass through, say, the entrance of a mall. It's one thing if they're making off with free drinks on your dime, another if they can suck your life away with the wave of a wand.

Pro or con? Well... it's something to think and talk about while you're doing all that drinking!"

http://tech.yahoo.com/blogs/null/145515

ABB Opts To Use RFID Technology To Avoid Shipment Errors

"June 30, 2009

RFID technology provides significant benefits to ABB Oy in the management of outbound goods streams. An RFID-based system records movements of goods automatically in the stock control system and prevents loading errors of consignments.

Moreover, the RFID-system offers ABB a significant saving in floor space used. When outbound consignments are loaded, it is no longer necessary to assemble goods in a consolidation area. Instead, goods-vehicle trailers can be used for storage. The automation in question covers around two million transactions per year.

ABB's system uses UPM Raflatac's RFID tags that were implemented by Vilant Systems. All transport units belonging to a consignment are marked with adhesive RFID tags at parcel level. The trailer loading docks are equipped with RFID readers, which scan all loaded parcels. Vilant's RFID software has been integrated with ABB's own SAP system.

The registration number of the vehicle arriving for loading is recorded in the SAP-system and the progress of the delivery is automatically controlled. The system knows what the consignment should include and the gate issues an error warning if there is an attempt to load the wrong goods onto a vehicle. Furthermore, the gate will not close until all goods belonging to a consignment have been loaded onto a vehicle. All this makes it virtually impossible to make incorrect deliveries.

ABB has been using pioneering RFID solutions since 2004. Their first RFID application was designed to control the re-usable plywood boxes which were used in standard raw material deliveries. This system, which is still in use, is based on the fact that all boxes equipped with RFID tags travel through RFID gates both at the supplier and at the factory.

ABB Oy's Head of Processes Julle Ala-Lahti has been pleased with the RFID applications.

"Vilant Systems took full responsibility of the implementation. Their consistent and rigorous approach revealed improvement potential in our material flow and offered prompt results," says Ala-Lahti.

ABB's systems are based on the Vilant Server 5 product family and Vilant Systems' RFID hardware products. UPM Raflatac's RFID tags are used as identifiers.

About ABB Oy ABB is a leading power electronics and automation technology group whose products, systems and services improve the competitive strength of its industrial and energy-company customers in an environmentally friendly way. ABB employs more than 115,000 people in around 100 countries.

About Vilant Systems Founded in 2002 in Finland, Vilant Systems is one of the leading suppliers of RFID applications in Europe. Using RFID solutions developed by Vilant, it is possible to automate corporate activities in the supply chain, production and stock control and thus to create significant savings in the management of goods streams. Vilant RFID software and hardware is integrated with customers' own ERP systems, so that physical process benefits and IT system efficiency can be maximised. www.vilant.com

SOURCE: UPM Raflatac"

http://www.rfidsolutionsonline.com/article.mvc/RFID-Technology-To-Avoid-Shipment-Errors-0001

RFID-enabled inventory tracking system

"TCM-RFiD, a Singapore-based real-time tracking solutions and RFID consultancy has been awarded a contract by the SMRT Corporation Ltd (SMRT) for a warehouse inventory system using RFID technology.

The RFID-based system will be used to keep track of items such as engine spares and components used in the maintenance of buses, taxis and trains operated by SMRT, Singapore's premier multi-modal public transport operator.

"The system is designed to improve productivity and enhance shelf-life tracking in inventory management, which will lead to higher service standards in public transportation in Singapore," said Michael Oh, the managing director and founder of TCM RFiD.

"It provides a self check-out system on a 24/7 basis that enables SMRT technicians to correctly identify and retrieve spares thus enabling faster turnaround times for repairs and maintenance," he added.

The project is one of two by TCM RFiD that will benefit from co-funding from the Singapore Agency for Science, Technology & Research (A*STAR), under the RFID Innovation Platform initiative.

A*STAR has earmarked a sum of $4.5 million to co-fund 30 RFID pilot projects developed between 2008 and 2012 in both the public and private sectors.

According to Dr Lee Eng Wah, Director, National RFID Centre (Singapore), the pace of innovation in RFID is picking up with Singapore well placed to increase the adoption of RFID in many of its industry verticals.

He added that the RFID Innovation Platform has committed to date, S$1.25 million to fund 11 innovative RFID adoption projects, which has a total value of $3.7 million. "These projects are expected to save the adopters million of dollars through operation cost savings, productivity gains, and business growth," said Dr Lee.

Another project by TCM RFiD that is receiving a financial grant from A*STAR is a RFID-enabled weighing scale that can be used to reduce processing errors, improve efficiency and reduce raw material wastage for a label and barcode printing and solutions provider, Honsen Printing Industries for its inventory management.

TCM RFiD is also the lead solutions provider for a $4 million automated medication system currently deployed by the National Healthcare Group (NHG) for its hospitals in Singapore.

The system - Intelligent Medicine Dispensing System (i-MDS) - is the first of its kind in Asia and runs on customized software developed by TCM RFiD. It is designed for patient safety to prevent inadvertent errors in the dispensation of drugs.

"The system is set up to ensure that all the right procedures are being followed when it comes to the administering of drugs to patients: The right drug, right dosage to the right patient at the right time and by the right method - whether orally, intravenously or by injections," said Mr Oh.

TCM RFiD was one of the winners in the start-up category at the Asia Pacific ICT Awards (APICTA) 2007 held in Singapore on the strength of its innovative efforts for the development of the i-MDS.

It has also developed an inventory management system currently deployed by a local wine retailer to improve sales and increase staff productivity at its outlet, which was on display at the RFID World Asia 2009 exhibition in Singapore between 22-24 April."

http://www.morerfid.com/details.php?subdetail=Report&action=details&report_id=5941&display=RFID

Bar-Code Technology Is Not Cheaper Than RFID

"Many companies miss the opportunity to lower costs and boost sales because they confuse the expense of the data carrier with that of data acquisition.
article tools

June 29, 2009—Last week, the venerable New York Times ran an article on the bar code turning 35 years old (see Game Changer in Retailing, Bar Code Is 35). The article contained this jarring statement, which immediately jumped out at me: "Bar codes, after all, cost just half a cent each, while the electronic tags used in RFID cost more than 5 cents each."

I'm not sure where the writer came up with such prices, but what bothered me was the implication that bar codes are cheaper than radio frequency identification. That's simply untrue—and yet, it's a myth preventing many companies from benefiting from RFID (granted, some people want to believe it so they can use it as an excuse not to change).


Saying bar codes are cheaper than RFID tags is like saying a wood-handled hammer is cheaper than a nail gun. Well, yeah. But it takes a mere fraction of the time to finish a job with a nail gun than it would with an old-fashioned hammer. Similarly, apparel retailers have found that it takes 75 percent to 80 percent less time to complete a store inventory with RFID than with bar codes.

Lets say there are two apparel stores, each containing 15,000 items. The cost of the bar codes in Store A, at half a cent apiece, would be $75. The cost of the RFID tags in Store B, on the other hand, would be $750 at five cents—but just to be sure, let's use a figure of $1,500, since the cost might be closer to 10 cents. In the course of a year, let's say each company sells 250,000 items. The cost of the bar codes for Store A would be $1,250, while the RFID tags for Store B would cost $25,000. Bar codes look like a much better deal, sure—but remember, neither store has yet taken inventory.

Let's say each location decides that in order to maintain an inventory accuracy of 98 percent, it will conduct inventory twice daily—once upon opening, and again when closing. Each day, two employees at Store A would take a total of 10 hours to scan the bar codes on every item. The total labor cost would be $100 per day, or $36,500, assuming the store remains open 365 days per year. At Store B, meanwhile, it would take one worker two hours to read all of the RFID tags. The total labor cost each day would, thus, be $20—or $7,300 per year.

Collecting the data necessary to operate efficiently with bar codes would thus cost Store A $37,750 ($1,250 for bar codes, plus $36,500 in labor), whereas it would cost Store B $32,300 to collect the data it requires ($25,000 in tags, plus $7,300 in labor). So collecting the information needed to maintain a high inventory accuracy would actually cost more with bar codes than with RFID.

I realize I've simplified things in this example. You would also need to factor in the cost of handheld bar-code interrogators, RFID scanners, software and so forth. But you get the point, and there should be no disputing it: Collecting data is not cheaper with bar codes than with RFID tags.

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* RFID Journal LIVE! 2009 Report

The reality today is that most stores conduct inventory twice per year, not twice every day. Why? Because it's too expensive to hire people to scan bar codes twice daily. As a result, inventory accuracy in most apparel stores is approximately 65 percent—and that means the companies are losing a lot of sales. Since American Apparel began employing RFID to take inventory in its stores, however, it has found sales increasing by more than 14 percent. It seems to me that businesses not implementing RFID are missing out on an opportunity to cut costs while boosting sales, because of this crazy myth that bar codes are somehow cheaper, which is often perpetuated but is most certainly not the case.

Now let's say you're Store C. By installing an RFID system and taking inventory twice a day, you could boost your sales by 14 percent. That's an additional 35,000 items, assuming 250,000 items were sold annually before you implemented RFID. At an average selling price of $10, you would make an additional $314,200 every year ($350,000 in additional sales, minus $32,300 for RFID tags and labor on the original 250,000 items, and $3,500 in tags for the additional sales).

I guess the real question, then, is this: Why isn't Wall Street demanding that publicly traded apparel companies use this technology?"

http://www.rfidjournal.com/article/view/5005

Bling Nation raises $8M for cell phone payment system

"There’s something cool about buying stuff in stores with your cell phone. They do it in Europe and Asia, so why not here? Bling Nation has come up with a way to introduce pay-by-cellphone transactions in the U.S. for the purchase of physical goods at stores.

That, in turn, has enabled the company to raise $8 million in funding, which is being announced today. Investors include Lightspeed Venture Partners, Meck and Camp Ventures. The hope is to disrupt the inefficient $60 billion credit card purchasing industry.

The Palo Alto, Calif.-based company works with banks in local U.S. communities to set up the infrastructure required for its Redi Pay Bling mobile payments service. It offers consumers a better and more fun way to buy things with a phone, helps banks set up secure mobile payments, and lets merchants offer on-the-spot reward programs to keep customers coming back.

The banks give consumers a sticker to put on their cell phones that contain radio frequency identification (RFID) tags with special security features. You activate them the same way you activate an ATM or debit card.

wencesBling Nation also gives out tag readers to merchants. So when someone comes in contact with a reader, the tag wirelessly activates and performs a digital handshake. The customer then pushes a button on the phone to authorize a purchase. The tag reader verifies the transaction. A text message is sent back to the customer as a confirmation and receipt. You have to enter a PIN code on big transactions.

For consumers, it’s a good deal because it’s more convenient and safer than carrying around a lot of cash. If you lose your cell phone, you can quickly report it, and the payment mechanism won’t work on big transactions without the PIN code anyway.

Wences Casares, co-chief executive officer of Bling Nation, said it took two years to develop the technology platform, which is similar to systems used in Japan. Two months ago, the company deployed its first system with The State Bank in the small town of La Junta, Colo. Now 25 percent of the bank’s customers are using the system and it has signed up more merchants to participate than it had in previous payment systems in the last two years.

There is no personal data stored on the encrypted RFID tag. It has both a static number and a dynamic number (one that changes) that are used in the authentication system. That helps the bank protect against anyone trying to create fake tags.

The company competes with credit card companies like Visa and Mastercard. Other competitors include Revolution Money and Tempo.

Like its rivals, it keeps less than a percent of the transaction fee. But it will try to offer the best deals so that the smaller fee can be a draw for merchants. Merchants can offer incentive programs, like sending a text message offering a free drink after someone buys five drinks at a coffeehouse.

Casares and his co-CEO are veterans of the Latin American banking industry. They created Patagon, a banking portal, and Internet Argentina, an Internet service provider. They created a micro-finance institution that is Brazil’s biggest such bank now. They’re familiar with community banking and want to launch the technology platform in small communities in the U.S. first. About seven or eight banks are expected to be operational this year.

Eric O’Brien, a partner at Lightspeed, said the company has looked at mobile and online payments for a while but hadn’t backed anything in physical mobile payments until now because no one had developed a system that worked well for consumers, banks and merchants as well. It’s also as disruptive to the payments industry as the Internet was to the telecom industry a decade ago, he said.

Previously, the company got $5.3 million in funding from Meck. The company was founded in 2007 and has 25 employees."

http://digital.venturebeat.com/2009/07/02/bling-nation-raises-8m-for-cell-phone-payment-system/

Haptic Feedback, Fingerprint Identification, and RFID Tag Readers in Future iPhones

"Haptic Tactile Feedback

Perhaps most interesting amongst the patent applications is the acknowledgement by Apple that despite the many advantages of the iPhone's multi-touch screen, a lack of tactile feedback remains its biggest disadvantage:

However, one of a touchscreen's biggest advantages (i.e., the ability to utilize the same physical space for different functions) is also one of a touchscreen's biggest disadvantages. When the user is unable to view the display (because the user is occupied with other tasks), the user can only feel the smooth hard surface of the touchscreen, regardless of the shape, size and location of the virtual buttons and/or other display elements. This makes it difficult for users to find icons, hyperlinks, textboxes or other user-selectable input elements that are being displayed, if any are even being displayed, without looking at the display.
...
Unless touch input components are improved, users that, for example, drive a motor vehicle, may avoid devices that have a touch input component and favor those that have a plurality of physical input components (e.g., buttons, wheels, etc.).

The proposed solution is the adoption of "haptic" display technologies which allow for some tactile feedback from touch screen displays. Apple proposes including a grid of piezoelectronic actuators that can be activated on command. By fluctuating the frequency of these actuators, the user will "feel" different surfaces as their finger moves across it. As an example, a display could include a virtual click wheel which vibrates at a different frequency as the center. Users could easily sense the difference and use the click wheel without having to look at it.

Haptic technology has started gaining adoption in other mobile phones and there had been some talk that Apple might have been looking to adopt it.

Fingerprint Identification as an Input Method

A second very intriguing patent application suggests the detection of a user's individual fingerprints as an input method. Fingerprints have already been used in computers for security purposes, but Apple's research involves the use of fingerprint patterns to actually identify distinct fingers. This could then be used to produce specific functions depending on which finger is being used. As shown in the table below, an index finger press might perform one action (PLAY/STOP) while a middle finger press could fast forward.


The reason for such a distinction again falls back on non-visual usage. Instead of requiring the user to find a button on the touchscreen, the use of different fingers alone could trigger different commands.

RFID Reader

Finally, the last notable application covers the dual use of a touch screen as an RFID reader. RFID tags are small circuits that can be embedded in objects for identification using a special reader. Apple suggests that the an RFID antenna can be placed in the touch sensor panel itself, allowing it to also be used as a RFID reader. As RFID tags become more prevalent, this could add a very useful function to future touch screen devices."

http://www.macrumors.com/2009/07/02/haptic-feedback-fingerprint-identification-and-rfid-tag-readers-in-future-iphones/

RFID at the races

"Twenty thousand runners pounding the pavement for more than 26 miles. How do you keep track of all of them? Officials of the Los Angeles Marathon rely on RFID tags and readers. Event organizers first tested the technology in 2008 and were so pleased with the results that they used it again in late May for the 2009 road race.

Each of the registered runners attached RFID-enabled timing tags from ChronoTrack Systems to his or her shoelaces. The tags, which incorporate UPM Raflatac RFID tags and Impinj tag chips, recorded times at the start, at the finish, and at milestones along the race route.

According to UPM Raflatac, attaching the disposable plastic-enclosed tags to the runners' shoes ensures consistent placement and readability. At certain milestones, the Los Angeles runners pass over urethane ramps that use UHF antennas to transmit race data to readers. Custom-designed controllers then format the collected data for use by scoring software. The system logged accurate data for 99.84 percent of the runners in 2008.

One thing we know: If this technology had been around in 1980, Rosie Ruiz wouldn't have had a chance of scamming Boston Marathon officials."

http://www.dcvelocity.com/news/?article_id=2348

Three-year study shows RFID tags can withstand

"Radio frequency identification tags proved they can withstand multiple trips through the supply chain.

A three-year study of how the RFID tags handle temperature changes, wet and dry environments, cleaning, dropping, transporting and loading came back with promising results.

“What they determined is you could use a one-way tag multiple times with almost 100% readability,” said Jerry Welcome, president of the Washington, D.C.-based Reusable Packaging Association, sponsor of the study.
A researcher affixes a radio frequency identification tag to reusable containers used in a three-year test on RFID technology's durability. The small labels on the right are the RFID tags...
Courtesy Reusable Packaging Association

A researcher affixes a radio frequency identification tag to reusable containers used in a three-year test on RFID technology's durability. The small labels on the right are the RFID tags, while the larger labels contain identification data needed solely for the purpose of the test.

While the first two years of the study saw the RFID tags — affixed to one of two sizes of reusable plastic containers — subject to vibration tests, dropped from different angles, wrapped and shipped, it was the past year that they were really put to the test.

Three produce companies used RFID tags on their RPCs destined for Wal-Mart Stores Inc., all the way through the supply chain process — from field to store shelves.

Frontera Produce, Edinburg, Texas; Stemilt Growers, Wenatchee, Wash., and Salinas, Calif.-based Tanimura & Antle used the RFID tags with their produce shipments.

After two trips through the entire supply chain, the tags, which were subject to field conditions, coolers, trucks, distribution centers and cleaners, survived both trips. After the testing, 109 of 110 containers on a pallet could be read with 100% accuracy.

“Where we focused primarily was will it survive for the produce supply chain,” Welcome said. “It goes through a pretty vigorous system when you think about it.”

One trick to the success of this study is the placement of the tag.

“We did have some tags not applied correctly that did fall off,” Welcome said. “But for the most part, the vast majority stayed on and did their job.”

Optimal placement of an RFID tag is discussed in the entire study, which is available only to the association’s members at this time.

Besides the added value of being able to use a one-way RFID tag, Welcome said another cost saving advantage discovered is the need for fewer tag readers. Readers and equipment, along with pallets, were included in the study.

Welcome said the results of this study are particularly important for the produce industry because so much information can be stored on an RFID tag, and the study shows how the entire system can be more cost effective.

“That tag can be read and rewritten several times,” Welcome said. “It can have both product information and asset information. The whole reason to use the tags themselves is that you can get a lot out of them.”

From the grower-shipper’s perspective, the tags can store lot numbers, Global Trade Identification Numbers or other distinguishing facts, which can help quickly identify products in the case of a recall or outbreak.

For the pallet pooling company or RPC manufacturer, they can store and track information about that pallet’s number of trips, durability, etc., and use it to optimize their systems.

For both parties, the tags help facilitate analysis of the supply chain.

Lettuce, apples and peppers were used in this the study. Lettuce was used because of its high water content, and water’s ability to detune radio frequencies, while apples and peppers were used to study the effects of seeds, pits and shape on radio frequencies.

The RPCs used in the study were manufactured by Georgia-Pacific, Atlanta; IFCO Systems NA., Houston, and Orbis Container Corp., Fresno, Calif. The RFID tags were provided by Alien Technology, Morgan Hill, Calif.; Avery Dennison, Pasadena, Calif.; Impinj, Seattle, and UPM Raflatac, Hebron, Ky.

The physical testing was conducted at Michigan State University’s School of Packaging, while the RFID readability testing was performed at California State Polytechnic University. The study was peer reviewed by both universities."

http://thepacker.com/Three-year-study-shows-RFID-tags-can-withstand/Article.aspx?articleid=367856&authorid=351&feedid=218&src=recent

RFID system provides real-time monitoring

"Hi-G-Tek, a developer of radio frequency sensing and control devices, is introducing a new protocol that can be used in the packing, storing and shipping of fresh produce.

The Rockville, Md.-based company is marketing its 18.7 Secure Series, a line of active radio frequency identification (RFID) sensors designed to track and monitor sensitive cargo and materials, including fresh produce. Chief executive officer Larry Blue said the new line meets all 18000-7 standard protocols set for active RFID (those powered by batteries) by the International Standards Organization.

“It’s like all light bulbs screw into one socket,” Blue said. “The ISO establish rules and ways for products to inter-communicate. It enables companies to make products that work with each other.”

One of the 18.7 Secure Series products Blue thinks is suited to perishable items like fresh produce is a temperature sensor that reports in real time the condition of a shipment in the back of a truck.

“It can have a big impact on shelf life or spoilage,” Blue said. “The other thing this allows is, once you know a temperature profile, you can manage first-in, first-out in the distribution center through the tagging of pallets.

“With active RFID, you can immediately get the data.”

Blue said data is transmitted wirelessly to a hand-held computer or personal digital assistant.

“A store manager looking for shipment from a distribution center can call up and know where the truck is and what the condition and shelf life (of the cargo) is going to be, from source to destination,” he said.

Another product in the line is a container security device, whereby loads can be locked and monitored for any instances of tampering or contamination.

“The key thing here for us is, the perishables market is a market we want to get into,” Blue said. “We’ve primarily focused on tanker trucks and liquids like gasoline and oil.”"

http://thepacker.com/RFID-system-provides-real-time-monitoring/Article.aspx?articleid=367850&feedid=218&src=recent

RFID Sales Projected Growing 5 Percent

"Forecast says retailers, governments fuel growth despite downturn

Worldwide RFID sales will increase 5 percent in 2009 to $5.56 billion despite the global economic downturn, according to a forecast by IDTechEx, an international market research and consulting firm.

The firm said sales of RFID tags, readers and software/services for RFID cards, labels, and other products and services are growing even amid the widespread reduction in inventory and shipping.

The report said many segments of the industry are growing at an annual rate of more than 10 percent.

The overall growth rate will be affected, nevertheless, by softness in some major markets and the completion of the Chinese national ID card program, which has been responsible for billions of dollars in RFID revenue in recent years. Despite the completion of the Chinese ID card program, public sector spending is still a significant source of RFID revenue, the report said.

Retailers will use about 225 million RFID tags on pallets and cases in response to mandates by major retailers such as Wal-Mart, mostly in the U.S.

Despite widespread criticism of the way Wal-Mart managed its mandate, the report forecasts a further "take off" in retail use of RFID outside formal mandates by retailers. For example, Marks & Spencer and American Apparel will use 200 million RFID tags on apparel during 2009. An additional 350 million tags will be used in the form of transit tickets, such as on toll roads. Overall, 2.35 billion RFID tags will be sold in 2009 compared with 1.97 billion in 2008.

A growing number of local governments, including some in China, Australia and New Zealand, have made it mandatory to use RFID systems to track animals such as pigs, cattle and sheep. For example, New Zealand, by law, requires all dogs to be tagged with RFID; Australia requires 35 million head of cattle to be tracked. The report forecasts 105 million tags in this sector in 2009."

http://www.joc.com/node/412170

Guard RFID Releases First Tamper Resistant Active RFID Umbilical Tag

"Guard RFID Solutions Inc., announced that its leading-edge TotGuard Infant Protection solution now has an active RFID based tamper resistant umbilical tag, with a built-in tamper alert mechanism.

The tag is designed to thwart infant abduction attempts, by sensing the removal of the tag placed on the umbilicus of a newborn. This is the first, and only, tamper-detecting umbilical tag in the market.

Vice President of Sales, Beth Bandi said, "Our exclusive tamper mechanism alerts caregivers if a tag has been altered, tampered with or removed, allowing them to take immediate action to keep the infant secure".

Guard RFID's tamper resistant umbilical tag is designed to sit unobtrusively on the infant's umbilicus, where it does not obstruct care. Bandi explains, "The tag is placed within a pod that is attached to the umbilical clamp, which is clipped on the newborn's umbilicus at birth. The Pod protects the tag, so that it can be cleaned easily. The pod is disposed after use, and so is not required to go through any costly sterilization and disinfecting processes. This is yet another step we have taken towards assisting healthcare facilities in their efforts to try and eliminate cross-infection between patients.

Bandi continued, "We have added another level of security to ensure TotGuard offers the most complete and reliable infant protection available". The TotGuard Infant Security system uses the only Disposable tamper-detecting Infant Tags on the market.

About Guard RFID Solutions

Guard RFID develops Active RFID technologies and products for Healthcare and Enterprise applications. Guard RFID's products can accurately track and locate assets and people, and are used for enhanced automation, workflow, monitoring and security solutions. Guard RFID's ability to support multiple applications on its platform positions the company to be able to offer combined people and asset solutions all on the same infrastructure. Founded in early 2007, Guard RFID introduced the first low-cost disposable Active RFID tags to the market, eliminating the need to recycle tags, and allowing for mass deployment for a reasonable investment. Guard RFID Solutions is federally incorporated in Canada, with its head office in the Province of British Columbia, and its Sales office in Atlanta, GA."

http://www.morerfid.com/details.php?subdetail=Report&action=details&report_id=5944&display=RFID

IBM Keeps the European Horticultural Industry Blooming with Sensor Technology

"New System to Help Container Centralen Manage 3.5 Million Flower & Pot Plant Trolleys Daily

KONGENS LYNGBY, Denmark, June 30 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- IBM (NYSE: IBM) and Container Centralen today announced that by February 1, 2010, Danish Container Centralen -- Europe's largest provider of re-usable transport equipment and services -- will use IBM sensor technology to allow participants in the horticultural supply chain to track the progress of shipments as they move from growers to wholesalers and retailers across 40 countries in Europe. The project is the largest of its kind in the horticulture business.

(Logo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20090416/IBMLOGO )

Approximately 80,000 growers, wholesalers, and retailers use Container Centralen's flower and pot plant trolleys to deliver fresh flowers and plants speedily and in the best possible condition. The company's flower and pot plant trolleys -- called CC Containers -- are designed to meet the specific needs of the horticultural industry. The containers are suitable for mechanical handling, and since they are also used as retail display units, the flowers and plants can be transported right from the grower to the consumer in the store with no need for product handling in between -- meaning less damage to goods and reduced overall distribution costs.

In order to meet customer requirements, Container Centralen needs to be able to quickly and easily make the trolleys available to their customers where and when they are needed. And with 3.5 million flower and pot plant trolleys in circulation in the international network known as the "CC Pool System," careful tracking of the trolleys is essential.

Together with IBM, Container Centralen is outfitting each of its flower and pot plant trolleys with intelligent Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) tags, which will allow it to offer an unprecedented level of transparency and security for all the players in the horticultural supply chain. It is expected to help the users reap significant savings through the entire supply chain from growers to wholesalers and retailers due to improved order management.

"After conducting extensive research of RFID technology throughout the past years, we have come to the conclusion that an RFID project is of vital importance for both our -- and our customers' -- logistics as suppliers to the wholesale and retail trade. We were happy to discover that our partners in this project had the same views on the future and RFID. Our overall common aims are to obtain higher efficiency and cost reductions in operations; improve control of the CC Containers circulating in the CC Pool System; and satisfying the future demands of the retailers," says Tonny Vangsgaard Gravesen, CEO, Container Centralen.

In addition to speeding supply chain operations, Container Centralen's RFID initiative will prevent the creation of counterfeit horticultural flower and pot plant trolleys. By putting a stop to the introduction of these inferior containers, Container Centralen can ensure high quality service through the entire supply chain.

Container Centralen's decision to deploy RFID technology across its operations followed a successful pilot in which in the solution was defined. Now, the company plans to equip all its horticultural flower and pot plant trolleys with RFID tags by 2010.

"Through the use of sensor technology, Container Centralen is sowing the seeds for a smarter, more effective horticultural shipping system," said Boy Steiner, business development executive, IBM.

All of the data from the RFID tags Container Centralen is using will be captured and stored by IBM's WebSphere Sensor Events software."

http://news.prnewswire.com/DisplayReleaseContent.aspx?ACCT=104&STORY=/www/story/06-30-2009/0005052882&EDATE=

Wireless Bluetooth RFID Reader to Locate Passive Tags in Real Time

"Guangzhou, China, July 01, 2009 --(PR.com)-- DAILY RFID has released 13.56MHz bluetooth RFID Reader DL990 for mobile RFID application. It is designed as a palm-sized wireless reader to locate passive tags in a real-time mode by transferring data to a back-end computer via the Bluetooth connection.

The Bluetooth RFID reader eliminates the need for a wired connection between the RFID reader and the central database, with blutooth connectivity to Bluetooth enabled device, including PDAs, mobile phones, smart phones, PCs, and laptops, thus giving this portable reader practical RFID capability.

The wireless bluetooth RFID reader, with weight only 90 grams, expands the general functionality and performance of the normal handheld reader. In addition, this wireless RFID Reader uses re-chargeable battery with low power consumption - continuously reads tags for up to 6000 times per charge.

The HF bluetooth RFID reader DL990 is widely used in the industries of security, patrol,mining,finance and railway system and so on. It is capable of reading and writing most 13.56MHz HF RFID tag formats, including ISO 14443A, ISO 14443B or ISO 15693 RFID tags on the market.

Please visit http://www.rfid-in-china.com/products_701_1.html for more information about this Wireless Bluetooth RFID reader.

About DAILY RFID CO.,LIMITED
DAILY RFID CO.,LIMITED (http://www.rfid-in-china.com), which belongs to PAN Group Co., ltd, is the leading company focusing on the research and development of EPC & RFID technology in China.

DAILY RFID specialize in producing arguably the world's most extensive line of RFID Tag,RFID Label,Smart Card and RFID Reader, which are suitable for any vertical markets, and have obtained the National Integrated Circuit Card Register Certificate, IC Card Manufacture License and ISO9001 Quality Management System Certification. Also, we own a factory covering an area of 26,000 square meters.

We are committed to providing "Innovative Technology", "Superior, Cost-efficient Product" and "Professional, Efficient Customer Services"."

http://www.pr.com/press-release/162388

Zebra Integrates with ThingMagic for Mobile RFID

"Zebra Technologies has announced the integration of its RP4T mobile RFID printer with ThingMagic s M5e-Compact embedded RFID reader module. The combination provides long-lasting RFID tags and labels, and identifies and tracks business critical assets across government, healthcare, manufacturing, mobile field service, and transportation and logistics.
ThingMagic's M5e-Compact is EPC global Generation 2 DRM compliant, and is optimized for Generation 2 RFID tags. Based on embedded reader module, it consumes one third of the power and is half the size (56 mm L x 36 mm W x 5 mm H) of the Mercury5e, enabling RFID applications for asset tracking, warehouse and inventory management, location awareness, and other use-cases that require customizable but small RFID reader solution.
Rising demand for point-of-application RFID print encoding has driven the development of the RP4T printer and we are confident that the M5e-Compact RFID reader module will enhance our RIFD solution, said Carolyn Ricci, senior product manager, RFID, Zebra Technologies."

http://www.cxotoday.com/India/News/Zebra_Integrates_with_ThingMagic_for_Mobile_RFID/551-103817-912.html

RFID Car Tracker

"Bharatiya Global Infomedia has launched a RFID-based Parking Management System designed to track and manage vehicles in parking areas or gated communities.

The system will ensure a complete secure system that is relatively simple to use and runs on low hardware overheads. The software has been handled for the management, controlling, transaction reporting and operation tasks for parking lots located on various parts of the city. Check-ins and check-outs of the parking-lots will be under control with RFID readers, labels and barriers.
Personnel costs will be reduced considerably using this technology. It will be possible to see unmanned, secure, automized parking-lots functioning with RFID technology in the future. Check-ins and check-outs will be handled in a fast manner without having to stop the cars so that traffic jam problem will be avoided during these processes. Drivers will not have to stop at the circulation points and parking tickets will be out of usage during check-ins and check-outs. It will avoid ticket-jamming problems for the ticket processing machines as well.

Vehicle owners will not have to make any payments at each check-out thus a faster traffic flow will be possible. Since there won't be any waiting during check-ins and check-outs the formation of emission gas as a result of such waiting will be avoided. With this RFID Parking Management system, car information can be automated gathered to enable vehicle management to be more efficient and safe."

http://www.cxotoday.com/India/News/BGIL_Launches_RFID_Car_Tracker/551-103737-911.html

RFID modules 50% thinner

"Components manufacturer Murata has announced that it has reduced the thickness of its rfid modules by half.

RFID modules 50 thinner
The reduction in size of its Magicstrap module means that it is suitable for paper label inlays for mainstream retail applications. The device is 1.6 x 1.0 x 0.25mm and Murata says its volume has been reduced by 89% compared to the first generation module.

Magicstrap rfid modules can be mounted using ordinary adhesive onto a number of conductive surface to act as the antenna. This allows users with only a minimal knowledge of rf electronics, to work with them. Each module comprises Murata's low temperature co-fired ceramic substrate and has embedded rf circuitry such as antenna filters, matching circuitry and 10kV esd protection within the substrate of the module.

According to Murata, the module's embedded wideband antenna matching circuit allows Magicstrap to be readable over the band 860-960MHz at a distance of up to 5m."

http://www.newelectronics.co.uk/article/18958/RFID-modules-50-thinner.aspx