TalkingTech
The view from the top of IT with TechWorld Editor Rohan Pearce
Nowadays, you don't have to be a Wal-Mart or Johnson & Johnson to deploy RFID. A kind of "RFID starter kit" from Tego lets much smaller businesses exploit the latest generation of large-memory, programmable tags.
By John Cox | 13 April, 2012 08:37
Charles Walton, inventor of the RFID technology now common everywhere from warehouses to retail stores to public libraries, has died at the age of 89 in California.
By Bob Brown | 29 November, 2011 07:34
The new Fiona Stanley Hospital in Perth, Western Australia, will put communications and sustainability at the forefront of its IT agenda, thanks to an agreement with international services firm, Serco, for facilities management and support services. Serco will partner with BT for the project. Under the contract, BT will install and manage the hospital’s communications infrastructure and run a range of IT services.
By Georgina Swan | 16 August, 2011 12:22
Australian airline, Qantas (ASX:QAN) has penned a four-year deal with Unisys to provide a Baggage Reconciliation System (BRS) for its Australian domestic flights, to begin on 10 November.
By Chloe Herrick | 25 October, 2010 11:41
If concerns about cost and security can be overcome, RFID technology could help solve a growing problem in large data centers: losing track of IT equipment.
By Patrick Thibodeau | 13 October, 2010 04:53
RF Code today announced a new system that uses a combination of radio frequency identification (RFID) and infrared technology to keep tabs on the location of individual IT assets, right down to the rack level.
By Ann Bednarz | 09 September, 2010 07:04
Businesses are using Radio Frequency ID (RFID) tags to track everything from large shipping containers, to livestock to tiny electronic components. It's unlikely though if any business is using the technology for the same purpose as Izzy's Ice Cream Cafe in St. Paul, Minn.
By Jaikumar Vijayan | 15 May, 2010 03:41
A researcher is working on technology he hopes will be able to control RFID tags and protect private information.
By Nick Barber | 19 April, 2010 06:30
A new research study estimates that 163 million "smartbooks" will ship worldwide in 2015 - a significant rate of growth given that the very first models only appeared in 2008.
By Lexton Snol | 23 February, 2010 23:49
Tracking Monarch butterflies on their route from Toronto to the Mexican border might be just what a 12-year-old girl needs to spark daydreams about growing up to design her own micro RFID chip.
By Jennifer Kavur | 02 September, 2009 07:55
The high barrier to entry into radio frequency identification (RFID) has led one Australian startup to develop an asset management system without the need for on-premise software or infrastructure.
By Rodney Gedda | 02 September, 2009 11:03
IBM on Tuesday introduced middleware that can gather data from a wide variety of networked sensors, analyze it, and feed it into other enterprise applications that can also use the data to make decisions.
By Stephen Lawson | 19 August, 2009 05:15
One of the world's newest communications technologies soon will be used to track one of the oldest.
By Stephen Lawson | 12 August, 2009 06:48
Storage vendor Freecom has come up with a new external USB hard drive that can only be accessed using an RFID (radio frequency identification) swipe card.
By John E. Dunn | 18 July, 2009 00:36
The New South Wales Roads and Traffic Authority (RTA) is set to overhaul its tolling business by allowing motorists to purchase petrol using their personal e-tags, but this has already received criticism because of the millions of dollars it could potentially add to the organisation’s coffers.
By Kathryn Edwards | 15 June, 2009 11:30
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