The 23rd edition of RFID Journal LIVE! 2025 is beginning to take shape and one of the deep dives this year are the discussions being held about real world implementations and outcomes in manufacturing ...
Radio frequency identification devices already track everything from Wal-Mart inventory to missing pets and busloads of NFL players during the Super Bowl. Now scientists at the Argonne National ...
Pharmaceutical and repackaging company Genixus is preparing to release the first of its RFID-enabled prefilled products for use in acute and critical healthcare. Its single-dose propofol syringes ...
The Memory Mirror (its time line display shown here) records the times that RFID-tagged objects are picked up and returned to a shelf or counter top being monitored by an RFID reader. The image of the ...
Radio frequency identification (RFID) chips are used today for everything from paying for public transit to tracking livestock to stopping shoplifters. But now, researchers in the U.S. and Japan want ...
Radio-frequency identification (RFID) tags have become a key component of global commerce, enabling stakeholders to track physical assets quickly and reliably. Deployed properly, the tags could be ...
One of the nation’s largest pharmaceutical wholesalers last week announced plans to launch a pilot program that uses radio frequency identification (RFID) technology to track drugs through the ...
Reports that the military has started outfitting firearms with RFID tags for tracking have raised security alarms. The concern: What if the enemy uses the tags to track soldiers on the battlefield?
The claim: COVID-19 vaccine syringes with RFID chips will be used to track who received injections and the recipients' locations The federal government can track vaccine recipients with RFID ...