RFID is the recognized acronym for Radio Frequency IDentification. The basis of RFID technology is that every RFID chip or tag is capable of sending a radio signal on a frequency wholly unique to itself.
Therefore, every RFID tag must have its own identifying frequency and the RFID tag readers have be sensitive enough to be able to distinguish between frequencies that are only a very minute bit different from its neighbouring tags. The difference can be microscopic.
Therefore, the technology has to be precise and selective, but not delicate, because the equipment has to be used on the shop floor and by people who are often pushed for time and in weather that may be bad.
In order for RFID to work, you need a tag, which is an smart sort of bar code and a radio receiver, often called a (tag) reader. However, whereas a bar code can only hold a small amount of data and the bar code reader has to be pointed at it, an RFID tag can hold much more data and can be read from a hundred metres or more - even out of line of sight.
Passive tags will only reveal their details when asked to by a reader, whereas an active tag is constantly relaying its contents. Clearly, active RFID tags are more costly than passive tags, because they require a long life battery.
These tags can be used to track goods from the moment they leave the manufacturer of the goods they describe to the in-bay of the retailer. The tags can then be up-dated or replaced and stored in the warehouse. Once there, RFID readers can keep management informed about which goods are where and if the sell-by-date is approaching.
This has implications for the levels of stock that a company needs to hold, the quantity of goods sold cheap because the sell-by-date is too near and for theft, all of which should boost company profits more than paying for the cost of the tags, the readers, the printers and the programmes.
At the click of a mouse, bosses will be able to see how much stock they have in real time and if this is all connected to the checkout cash registers, which are the most and least profitable articles. This makes reordering easy . Easy to the point of computerization. For instance, when supplies of the top ten percent of the best selling items falls below 1,000 order 10,000 more. Automatically, no questions asked.
RFID has many other uses as well. The ideas outlined above can be applied to farm animals, a call centre's computers, a fleet of commercial vehicles, an inventory of domestic items, your pets, your car and even your garden furniture. Some individuals who work over a boundary are even having them placed under their skin so that they do not have to wait at customs.
And do not forget that criminals on early discharge are also tagged. It is the same technology.
Therefore, every RFID tag must have its own identifying frequency and the RFID tag readers have be sensitive enough to be able to distinguish between frequencies that are only a very minute bit different from its neighbouring tags. The difference can be microscopic.
Therefore, the technology has to be precise and selective, but not delicate, because the equipment has to be used on the shop floor and by people who are often pushed for time and in weather that may be bad.
In order for RFID to work, you need a tag, which is an smart sort of bar code and a radio receiver, often called a (tag) reader. However, whereas a bar code can only hold a small amount of data and the bar code reader has to be pointed at it, an RFID tag can hold much more data and can be read from a hundred metres or more - even out of line of sight.
Passive tags will only reveal their details when asked to by a reader, whereas an active tag is constantly relaying its contents. Clearly, active RFID tags are more costly than passive tags, because they require a long life battery.
These tags can be used to track goods from the moment they leave the manufacturer of the goods they describe to the in-bay of the retailer. The tags can then be up-dated or replaced and stored in the warehouse. Once there, RFID readers can keep management informed about which goods are where and if the sell-by-date is approaching.
This has implications for the levels of stock that a company needs to hold, the quantity of goods sold cheap because the sell-by-date is too near and for theft, all of which should boost company profits more than paying for the cost of the tags, the readers, the printers and the programmes.
At the click of a mouse, bosses will be able to see how much stock they have in real time and if this is all connected to the checkout cash registers, which are the most and least profitable articles. This makes reordering easy . Easy to the point of computerization. For instance, when supplies of the top ten percent of the best selling items falls below 1,000 order 10,000 more. Automatically, no questions asked.
RFID has many other uses as well. The ideas outlined above can be applied to farm animals, a call centre's computers, a fleet of commercial vehicles, an inventory of domestic items, your pets, your car and even your garden furniture. Some individuals who work over a boundary are even having them placed under their skin so that they do not have to wait at customs.
And do not forget that criminals on early discharge are also tagged. It is the same technology.
About the Author:
Owen Jones, the author of this article writes on several topics, but is currently concerned with the RFID asset management. If you would like to know more, please go to our website at Active RFID Management.

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