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Our Technology Roadmapping relates to Radio Frequency Identification (RFID), where it began, how it works, how far it has come and how far it can go. ... The solution was a type of product identification at a time when the computer industry was in its infant stage and had unsophisticated databases. ... The response can be a radio or microwave transmission or an electromagnetic induction, depending on the type of tag. ... Active terrorism, on the other hand, has motivated many government officials to consider possibly tracking dangerous militants and keeping the terrorists from penetrating the border checkpoints by using RFID as a general identification tool. ...
INDUSTRY GOALS
The RFID technology in a broad term is related to devices that use radio waves to send and receive messages about individual items. ... Today the RFID uses radio frequency to read a tag and transmit its ID string over a serial port or a rudimentary network interface to a nearby PC. ... The tags will also be offered at different frequency levels. ... The current challenges with standardizing RFID are that the radio waves are held independently in the cities and are not controlled by the countries. As of now one cannot even use RFID in certain areas that will interfere with radio waves, thus, almost making the standardization of RFID impossible.
Approximate Word count = 2635 Approximate Pages = 10.5 (250 words per page double spaced)
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