tracking and tracing

Load Carrier Management on RoRo-Terminals

Load Carrier Management on RoRo-Terminals

Bernd Scholz-Reiter ORCID Icon, Felix Böse, Michael Teucke, Anne Virnich
The transparency of location and status of loadings and load carriers is particularly important for efficient warehouse management on seaport terminals. Today detection of load carrier movement processes and modified status information is insufficiently supported by software systems. An automated IT-based load carrier management system offers a wide range of opportunities for tracking and tracing positions and status information of loadings and load carriers. A permanent monitoring of changes regarding location and status allows the usage of innovative stock-keeping strategies, search time reduction, decrease of relocation processes and overall an improvement of the traffic flow on the seaport terminal area. This article addresses the design and modelling of a system that enables automated detection of location and status of load carriers on seaport terminals combining innovative information and communication technologies for identification, communication and localisation tasks. ...
Industrie Management | Volume 25 | 2009 | Edition 3 | Pages 25-28
E-Logistics and Services in Logistics

E-Logistics and Services in Logistics

Bernd Scholz-Reiter ORCID Icon, Christian Toonen, Anne Virnich
Modern information technolgies are essential for efficient processes in logistics. Concepts which base intensively on IT have become known as e-logistics. This article discusses the idea of e-logistics and relates it to different concepts within services in logistics. Therefore necessary technologies to realise e-logistics are introduced. As an example the technologies and developments of tracking-and-tracing are detailed.
Industrie Management | Volume 24 | 2008 | Edition 5 | Pages 13-16
Tomorrow’s Logistics with the EPCglobal Network

Tomorrow’s Logistics with the EPCglobal Network

Michael Clasen
Due to growing demands on logistic processes, increasing transportation costs and a crowded, highly competitive market, margins in this service sector are shrinking. In order to survive, logistics providers will have to reduce internal costs, for example by means of logistic optimization (e.g., scheduling of pickup and delivery). Equally important, they also need to offer their customers additional value-added services, such as tracking and tracing (e.g., temperature logging within the cold chain). These requirements can be seamlessly supported across multiple industries by the event-driven EPCglobal Network.
Industrie Management | Volume 23 | 2007 | Edition 1 | Pages 68-71