If you’ve worked with passive RFID before, you know that most readers only work within inches of the card. In [Fran’s] DEFCON talk this summer he calls it the “ass-grabbing method” of ...
The answer lies in an RFID chip attached to the inside of the bib ... with many runners passing the reader at once there must be a lot of RFID chatter on the airwaves.
The EPCglobal Hardware Certification Program tests and certifies RFID silicon chips, readers, reader modules, and printer/encoders with embedded reader modules. Introduced in April 2005 and now in ...
Also called an "RFID interrogator." The maximum distance between the reader's antenna and the tag vary, depending on application. Credit cards and ID badges have to be brought fairly close to the ...
The researchers say their new, less wasteful tags could help lower the retail sector's reliance on RFID chips, which use more than 10 billion tags annually. Most tags are used just once, and end up in ...