Sunday, July 27, 2008

Australia RFID Trials

Australia RFID pilots continue at higher power levels, while the current rules are at lower target levels. ...

GS1 Australia RFID standards

... "Technology standards group GS1 Australia says it has been granted an extension to its scientific licence allowing the use of radio frequency devices with up to 4 Watt of power. The Australian Communications and Media Authority (ACMA) has allowed trials of the ultra high frequency (UHF) RFID tags, despite a current ruling which limits RFID power to 1 Watt. " ...


Via Queensland Business Review: World-standard RFID

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Saturday, February 16, 2008

Airport RFID Trials Include Heathrow

Emirates Airline will invest in RFID technology trials at three airports: London Heathrow, Dubai International and Hong Kong International. The pilots will integrate RFID tags into the tracking of baggage in order to validate its effectiveness compared to barcoding and position the airline with a scalable solution for the future, where baggage volume is expected to increase. ...

Emirates Airline will pilot RFID baggage tracking at Heathrow

... "Emirates will be investing close to AED 2 million, to test the effectiveness and benefits of RFID against the existing barcode tracking system. The largest-ever trial of its kind for the airline industry, some half a million bags on Emirates flights will be tagged with RFID chips over the 6-month duration of the trial.

The Dubai-based airline hopes its investment will help revolutionise the way bags are tracked and monitored, and present innovative solutions to handle the increasing volumes of baggage every year as more people around the world use air travel more frequently.

With 58 of the double-decked A380 aircraft entering Emirates' service, each doubling the number of bags handled per aircraft, the airline is keen to find innovative technologies and new ways to improve baggage handling infrastructure and safeguard the level of trust of its customers.

RFID equipment has been installed at some of Emirates' check-in desks at the three participating airports. During the trial, trained staff will apply tags containing RFID chips to bags as part of the normal check-in process. The chips contain stored information including the bag unique ID number and route. In addition to the embedded RFID chips, these tags will also continue to display the traditional bar code.

The chips are read as they pass through the airport's baggage system, enabling effective sorting, security screening and delivery to the aircraft. Arriving bags are read on entry to the baggage system and receipted into the system for effective tracking. Essentially, the chips will enable bags to be tracked at every stage of their journey, and minimise the possibilities for mishandling baggage. " ...


Via Emirates Airline: RFID TRIALS AT THREE AIRPORTS

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Sunday, November 25, 2007

Farms Benefit from RFID Technology

Farms are able to justify technology investments such as RFID. ...

... "Rezare was involved in the 2005 Walton IT farm trial, which tested various technologies such as RFID (radio frequency identification) tags to identify cows. " ...


Via Stuff.co.nz: Hi-Tech Farms

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Monday, October 22, 2007

RFID School Trial for Children Students

UK school conducts RFID pilot to assess application for students. ...

... "The radio frequency identification system is being tested at Hungerhill School in Doncaster, South Yorkshire. " ...


Via UK Times Online: Microchip School Trial


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Related:

Avante International Technology: RFID Access Control System: "The AVANTE ACCESS-TRAKKER PAVS100 is a total personnel visibility system designed to provide basic application of RFID access control system and time-attendance management with nodal visibility. "

InCom Corporation: InClass RFID system: "InCom Corporation is the exclusive developer and manufacturer of the InClass attendance taking, reporting and security system. The Company's founders have extensive teaching, educational technology and network administration experience. "

RFID technology has its share of challenges as seen in early applications in schools, where the RFID readers generated duplicate transactions, creating data quality issues. ...

New York Times: RFID School Application Has Problems: "But for the Enterprise Charter School in Buffalo, where administrators gave ID cards with the RFID technology to around 460 students last year, the computer problems lasted for many months. "

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Sunday, June 10, 2007

Staples Active RFID Pilot

Reusable tags are being piloted by Staples to validate effectiveness for item-level tracking. A sampling of its products will be tagged in the pilot with active RFID tags. Early data shows 100% accuracy for the active technology, cutting down on the cycle-counting process for retail inventory. The active tags are reclaimed at the point-of-sale and reused. ...

... "Staples in late May started its trial at one of its Montreal stores, selectively tagging about 2,000 items, representing some 300 SKUs out of the 7,500 SKUs in a typical location ... " ...


Via eWeek: Staples RFID

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