Chipless RFID is an ill-defined term. Some people refer to printed RFID tags as chipless because they have no microchip (the circuits are printed). Printed RFID tags behave very much like conventional ...
A team of researchers in Scotland has unveiled a RFID tag, which they claim could make the technology cheaper as well as more sustainable. The scientists at the University of Glasgow explain that the ...
This article was originally published by RFID Update. June 7, 2005—An interesting development in the realm of tag prices has been the possibility of non-silicon based RFID tags. By way of background, ...
DUBLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The "Global Chipless RFID Market - Segmented by Product Type (Tag, Reader, Middleware), Application (Retail, Healthcare, Smart Cards, Aviation, Supply Chain), and Region - ...
IRVINE, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Vubiq Networks, Inc., the innovation leader in millimeter wave wireless broadband technology, products and solutions, today announced that it has been awarded a new ...
Chipless tags represent the promising evolution of item-level RFID, though their total contribution to the RFID market is not yet significant. So says Dublin-based Research and Markets, which recently ...
A chipless RFID approach offers a cost-effective alternative to bar-code readers. Radio frequency identification (RFID) is usually implemented with a reader and tag containing an integrated circuit ...
Chipless Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) technology represents a promising evolution beyond conventional RFID systems by eliminating the need for silicon-based chips. Instead, these devices rely ...
An interim stage between electronic article surveillance (EAS) and full-blown RFID. Chipless RFID tags use several one-bit EAS elements, each tuned to a different frequency, to create a serial number.
ID chips has long been "five cents each." http://www.ferret.com.au/articles/d2/0c01a9d2.asp *Well, here are some guys who've patented a conductive INK that removes ...