RFID technology, combined with AI capabilities and more, is joining forces to take down shrink and protect retail profits.
UC San Diego researchers have developed scalable, low-cost passive sensors that work without batteries using RFID technology.
If you’ve worked with passive RFID before, you know that most readers only work within inches of the card. In [Fran’s] DEFCON talk this summer he calls it the “ass-grabbing method” of ...
Data drives the future, and according to Dinesh Bharadia, an associate professor at UC San Diego, “data will be the next ...
RFID and Ambient IoT can be used independently and in tandem to make lives a little easier, more efficient, and a whole lot ...
Data is power. According to Dinesh Bharadia, an associate professor at UC San Diego in the Department of Electrical and ...
Also called an "RFID interrogator." The maximum distance between the reader's antenna and the tag vary, depending on application. Credit cards and ID badges have to be brought fairly close to the ...
Phenix Label, an Olathe, Kansas-based developer of labels and flexible packaging, has introduced a recyclable packaging design for liquid-filled bottles featuring a tearaway radio-frequency ...
Passport holders come in varying sizes and with security features such as RFID-blocking technology or zippers. No matter what type of passport carrier you seek, an array of options await you in ...
MANILA, Philippines—With just over two months before penalties take effect for motorists entering toll highways without working radio frequency identification (RFID) tags in January 2025 ...
By Ian Prasad Philbrick Advertisement Hundreds of Times readers submitted questions about our reporting on the election. And journalists around the newsroom got to work addressing them.