News

If you're looking for a way to get past that daily tool booth faster, you may have looked into an RFID toll tag. Here's how they work, and when they might not.
An electronic identification device that is made up of a chip and antenna. For reusable applications, it is typically embedded in a plastic housing, and for tracking shipments, it is usually part of a ...
AdvantaPure’s new GammaTag easily attaches to components such as sample and production bags, tanks, filters, manifolds, tubing and hose, storage vessels, and to complete single-use systems. Not only ...
RFID tags are great little pieces of technology, but unfortunately, the combination of paper, metal, and silicon means they are as bad as some modern pregnancy tests — single-use electronic devices ...
Radio frequency identification devices already track everything from Wal-Mart inventory to missing pets and busloads of NFL players during the Super Bowl. Now scientists at the Argonne National ...
Radio-frequency identification (RFID) tags have become a key component of global commerce, enabling stakeholders to track physical assets quickly and reliably. Deployed properly, the tags could be ...
Sunnyvale startup Wirama announced that they've finished the most precise RFID reader available yet, with the ability to locate passive RFID tags to within 6 inches (through the EPC Class 1 Gen 2 ...
Radio-frequency identification (RFID) tags can survive factories, warehouses and supermarkets, but how would they cope with an old-fashioned pressing with a steam iron? As RFID tagging slowly grows in ...
It’s a scenario that happens all too often. You see an item online, from apparel to electronics, and rush over to the store to buy it, only to discover the desired item is not actually in stock.