RFID

Application of RFID Technology in Production Control

Application of RFID Technology in Production Control

Rolf Jansen, Egon Müller
Increasing competition in product costs leads worldwide to the need of process improvement - especially in small and medium-sized enterprises. Projects of production and logistics, with the aim of optimising process organisation and manufacturing control are assumed to have the knowledge of decisive system parameters and adequate possibilities in interference. Against this background the efficient use of the resource information is very important in future. Precisely because the use of RFID in production control has even more rationalisation potentials, when the process monitoring of production process must be fast, safe and efficient real time close controlled.
Industrie Management | Volume 20 | 2004 | Edition 3 | Pages 32-35
RFID: Technology and Logistics Applications

RFID: Technology and Logistics Applications

Peter Gabriel, Randolf Schließer
RFID systems are yet waiting for their breakthrough in logistics. Today, radio-based identification systems are restricted to closed-loop supply chains and selected high-value applications. Mass applications are still tested in first pilot projects. The article describes the state-of-art in RFID and the foreseeable technology roadmap. Today’s and future applications of RFID are discussed with a focus on retail and manufacturing logistics. Finally, the most important issues of standardization and privacy are addressed.
Industrie Management | Volume 20 | 2004 | Edition 3 | Pages 29.32
Ubiquitous Computing: Impacts on the Industry

Ubiquitous Computing: Impacts on the Industry

Elgar Fleisch, Michael Kickuth, Markus Dierkes
Using case studies, this article describes the business impact that Ubiquitous Computing could have on future organisations. Not only human beings but also products want to communicate a specific image. The article shows how this will affect future business processes. The product becomes the agent of the producer and communicates with its environment in order to comply with the performance objectives given by the producer. By using Ubiquitous Computing, possible future product functions will outperform the current industrial communication design by far.
Industrie Management | Volume 19 | 2003 | Edition 6 | Pages 29-31
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