While RFID made its first appearance in the automotive industry twenty years ago, its growth potential lies in automating the manufacturing process, according to ABI Research analyst Robert Foppiani.
Ed. Note: This post originally appeared at the blog of RFID Journal LIVE!, the world’s largest conference and exhibition focused on RFID and related technologies. Developments over the last few years ...
At its Auburn, Mich. manufacturing plant, Dow Corning will be piloting the Tag Acquisition Processor (TAP) made by Chelmsford, Mass.-based Reva Systems to monitor work-in-process. The pilot will ...
Radio frequency identification (RFID) tags have been around since World War II, when the British Royal Air Force affixed tags to planes as a way to distinguish friend from foe, but it wasn’t until ...
Radio frequency identification is being adopted rapidly in a growing number of tire industry processes and will deliver more transparency, fewer rejected tires and production failures and better ...
A new white paper by Dr. Peter Green examines the tradeoffs between using barcode and RFID scanning for tracking work-in-process in manufacturing plants For efficient tracking of work-in-process you ...
When it comes to automation, if you had to guess where this or that technology got its start, you’d be safe to go with the automotive industry as your answer. So it’s not a surprise to find that RFID ...
If you’ve visited Finland or other Nordic countries, there is a good chance you’ve looked out a window or opened a door manufactured by Fenestra Oy. The company produces more than half a million ...
The conventional method deployed by competitors produces RFID antennas through wet etching using wet chemicals. However, Walki Group's pioneering technology is characterized by computer to antenna ...