Meyers has invested in equipment to create branded labels with built-in technology to simplify the adoption of RFID for brands without requiring multiple processes or vendors. Consumer packaged goods ...
July 13, 2006 IBM and Marnlen RFiD are collaborating on enabling consumer privacy protection for RFID tags -- the potential production of smart radio frequency identification (RFID) labels using IBM ...
Sam’s Club and Walmart pharmacies have announced their use of a talking medication solution that leverages RFID technology across all the retailers’ pharmacies nationwide. The solution, deployed this ...
It's been more than two years since Wal-Mart and the DoD originally announced their RFID initiatives for their supply chains. Suppliers to these entities immediately balked at the high cost of the ...
In another collaboration for world dominance in RFID (or at least to make current product lines better), Zebra Technologies Corp. just announced plans to license Magellan’s Phase Jitter Modulatin (PJM ...
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 ...
WASHINGTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Kit Check, the leader in automated medication management solutions for hospitals, today announced an expansion of their continued partnership with MPI Labels, a leader in ...
In Integrated Solutions' Annual Resource Guide To RFID And Supply Chain Management inserted in the August 2005 issue, we featured a story called RFID Compliance: Trial And Error, which was about Del ...
Graph-Tech USA (GTUS) is introducing the RFID-Runner, a next-generation UHF encode-and-print system designed to improve speed, efficiency, and cost-effectiveness in RFID label production. Traditional ...
A shopping trip in Texas to one of Walmart’s many superstores yielded many items with price points under three dollars, including a couple for less than 75¢. Each of these products shared something in ...
Despite barriers ranging from high RFID infrastructure costs to a “murky intellectual property environment,” Avery Dennison plans to pour $35 million into radio-frequency identification in 2005, ...
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