rfid
Touch (Beta)
n initial exploratory period will develop specific research questions and application areas. Touch will look closely at social practices around mobile use and RFID. How does the increasing digitalisat
>30 days ago by zinkous, 3 Users, more info saveRFIDAnalysis.org
Analysis of the Texas Instruments DST RFID
>30 days ago by qubit, 2 Users, more info saveRFID CD Based Training
This CD based training is all about RFID (radio frequency identification technology), including Bar Code RFID. First you
>30 days ago by NerdGod, 1 User, more info saveBBC NEWS | Technology | UN predicts 'internet of things ...
>30 days ago by Davezilla, 1 User, more info saveRadio-frequency identification - Wikipedia, the free en ...
>30 days ago by amaiko, 1 User, more info saveRFID Equipment - RFID Tags, Readers, Antennas, Software ...
>30 days ago by amaiko, 1 User, more info savePaper Tyger Launches New RFID Shield
“The Paper Tyger® RFID Shield is extremely effective at protecting consumer privacy and will assist tremendously in advancing the use of the technology by eliminating the fear of identity theft.” Err,
>30 days ago by PaulRaven, 1 User, more info saveHitachi Shows Off Powder-Sized Smart Tag
"Hitachi [...] recently showed off radio frequency identification, or RFID, chips that are just 0.002 inches by 0.002 inches and look like bits of powder."
>30 days ago by PaulRaven, 1 User, more info saveInternal RFID tagging for all RENO GmbH shoes
"The latest news from the RFID scene is that European shoe company Reno GmbH is to embed RFID tags into the soles of a large proportion of all the shoes that it sells..."
>30 days ago by PaulRaven, 1 User, more info saveHitachi develops RFID powder
"On February 13, Hitachi unveiled a tiny, new “powder” type RFID chip measuring 0.05 x 0.05 mm — the smallest yet — which they aim to begin marketing in 2 to 3 years." ZOMFG! ph34r t3h sm4r+
>30 days ago by PaulRaven, 1 User, more info saveNew Scientist Invention blog: Edible RFID
"The tags would be covered with soft gelatin that takes a while to dissolve in the stomach. After swallowing a tag a patient need only sit next to a radio source and receiver." I predict par
>30 days ago by PaulRaven, 1 User, more info saveConcerns raised over U.K. ePassport warranties
"...only a two-year warranty on the microchips that make 'em tick, despite the fact that passports are intended to be used for a full ten years." UK=SNAFU. Just microwave the damn things.
>30 days ago by PaulRaven, 1 User, more info saveAll the World's a Tag
"The basic idea is that a slew of emerging technologies -- RFID tags, wireless networking, portable devices hooked up to satellites, wearable computing -- will make objects in the real world act
>30 days ago by PaulRaven, 1 User, more info saveInvisible RFID Ink Safe For Cattle And People, Company ...
"Somark Innovations announced this week that it successfully tested biocompatible RFID ink, which can be read through animal hairs." Via Warren Ellis, who justifiably predicts that the geek
>30 days ago by PaulRaven, 1 User, more info saveHackers get theirs, RFID tags follow them everywhere at ...
"The "CCC Sputnik" badges, as they're known, are tracked by 35 monitoring stations, which in turn export a public XML feed so that anyone who wants to can track the wearers around the e
>30 days ago by PaulRaven, 1 User, more info save10,000 RFID tags to blanket Tokyo's Ginza neighborhood
"...a new project in Tokyo's Ginza shopping district, which is getting blanketed with 10,000 RFID tags, along with other "beacons" to help out tourists and shoppers make their way aroun
>30 days ago by PaulRaven, 1 User, more info saveCyber-concrete lets walls speak
"Cyber-concrete can store information about itself, such as when, where and how it was manufactured and data about strength and quality, making for more efficient and reliable safety inspection s
>30 days ago by PaulRaven, 1 User, more info savePersonal firewall for the RFIDs you carry
"...a "firewall for RFID tags" -- a device that sits on your person and jams the signals from all your personal wireless tags (transit passes, etc), then selectively impersonates them a
>30 days ago by PaulRaven, 1 User, more info saveCracked it!
"3 million Britons have been issued with the new hi-tech passport, designed to frustrate terrorists and fraudsters. So why did Steve Boggan and a friendly computer expert find it so easy to break
>30 days ago by PaulRaven, 1 User, more info saveRocket develops "paper battery" for use with ...
"While juicy, scientific details aren't readily available, we do know that the "paper battery" won't include any toxic chemicals, is "flexible and thin," and molds together th
>30 days ago by PaulRaven, 1 User, more info saveLaser RFID tags
"Conventional tags get their power from a radio signal transmitted by a reader. The new tags will instead draw power from a laser beam produced by a reader, a photocell on top of the tag converti
>30 days ago by PaulRaven, 1 User, more info save“Unmanned hotels” to lose front desk staff
"...a network of hotels that rely on an online reservation and payment system, RFID-enabled Orico credit cards that serve as keys, and RFID-enabled door entry locks." Oh, so hackable. Anothe
>30 days ago by PaulRaven, 1 User, more info saveResearchers See Privacy Pitfalls in No-Swipe Credit Car ...
"Tom [...] tapped an envelope against a black plastic box connected to his computer. Within moments, the screen showed a garbled string of characters..." Arphids can be hacked, hello?
>30 days ago by PaulRaven, 1 User, more info saveEU RFID Survey Shows Privacy Protection a Prime Concern
" ... the preliminary results indicate Europe needs rules and technologies for the safe and secure implementation of RFID." Gee, d'you think so?
>30 days ago by PaulRaven, 1 User, more info saveCheap/free capacitor bank and charger
"HOW TO: Make a capacitor bank useful for many applications, ie a railgun, coilgun, RFID zapper..."
>30 days ago by PaulRaven, 1 User, more info save