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Wal-Mart RFID Devices
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Wal-Mart RFID Devices

 

The retail giant was expected to throw its weight behind RFID (radio frequency identification) technology at the Retail Systems 2003 industry conference in Chicago. Sources familiar with the company's plans said executives will make a presentation encouraging its top 100 suppliers to start using wireless inventory tracking equipment--chips affixed to products, and scanners in warehouses--by 2005.

 

Wal-Mart's endorsement of Wal-Mart RFID Devices give an important boost to efforts to overhaul the world's supply chains, a makeover that could provide a shot in the arm for technology companies struggling to find buyers for the latest products and services. RFID is expensive, but backers say it offers long-term benefits that could dwarf the impact of the bar code on inventory control and distribution.

 

RFID spending will be "bigger than...Y2K," predicted AMR Research analyst Pete Abell. "I imagine there will be a rush on investing in RFID." Suppliers are already exploring the use of RFID technology in tracking goods from the factory to warehouses. But backing from retailers is considered important because it could ultimately allow products to be tracked on store shelves.

 

Executives from Bentonville, Ark.-based Wal-Mart RFID Devices are expected to aggressively push for the adoption of Wal-Mart RFID Devices technology during a presentation at an upcoming event for retailers, suppliers and distributors, sources said. Part of the discussion will involve the significance of standards development and its effect on the widespread adoption throughout the supply chain.

 

Wal-Mart representatives did not return calls for comment.

 

RFID tags have the potential to streamline and improve inventory management by allowing manufacturers to more efficiently enter and track the flow of goods. For example, RFID could let a company add a boxful of goods to its inventory systems all at once, without having to unpack the carton and scan each piece separately. An RFID scanner can pick up signals from all the chips in the sealed box, something bar code systems can't do.

 

The cost savings could be substantial for Wal-Mart RFID Devices, the world's biggest retailer with sales of $217.8 billion in 2002. AMR's Abell estimates that Wal-Mart's costs associated with supply chain--including storing, transporting and keeping track of goods--are about 10 percent of overall sales. RFID, Abell said, could save 6 percent to 7 percent of those costs annually. Using the 2002 figures as a model, that would amount to about $1.3 billion to $1.5 billion saved.

 

Such savings are an attractive brass ring, but installing the technology is no small task. Wal-Mart suppliers "may find it difficult to meet the early 2005 time frame," Abell said.

 

Let’s see how WalMart and Walmart RFID Devices are associated together. Recently, Walmart goes serious with Wal-Mart RFID Devices.  A good discussion on RFID Walmart MetaFilter. Apparently, US Giant retailer Walmart is forcing its top 100 suppliers to track goods using RFID by 2005. Walmart even seems to track women's panties already!

 

Gilette started the wave last year, but if every single product one buys now will implement a long-lived passive tracking device, the opportunities are rife for retailers to dig into people's privacy...

 

Let’s have a look on one personal story, My Personal Encounter with the RFID Walmart

Comment, from mzaneg on 6-10-3

 

This is my personal encounter with the Walmart RFID tags.

 

I bought two pairs of panties a few months ago at Wal-Mart. these were the kind that were hung on a little plastic hanger, individually sold, and not packaged (I’m sure many women are familiar with these).

 

Anyway, one day I noticed a small hard object inside the crotch of the panties I had chosen to wear that day. When I began to investigate what this was I realized that the panties had an opening at the seam of the cotton crotch lining. I felt inside to get the small hard object which was glued or taped with some type of strong adhesive. I had worn and washed the panties several times before noticing this so that will give u some idea how strong this adhesive was as well as how small.

 

The object was in an unmarked white casing very small less than half an inch long and fairly thin across. i checked the other pair of panties (same make but different color) and it also had the object inside the crotch. It was so small it was undetectable by just the wearing. i had no idea what it was though thought it odd but really didn't give it much though i just threw the little things away ... now I wish I had kept them.

 

And now ... today I just read this article on Wal-Mart and RFID and just knew that that little thing in my panties was a tracking device!!

 

Seems to me that a thing like that would be placed in an obvious place where the person buying the product can see and remove it. I hope you post this so people will be sure to check products they buy at Wal-Mart. btw, I don't shop at Walmart anymore but from what this article states, it looks like we may be fighting a losing battle.

 

I did a little research and was shocked at the possibilities of privacy invasion with RFID. Few good links are below for more info on the subject.

 

Yours truly,

Gena

 

 

Now, instead of paranoid worries, I hope people start focusing on the promise of RFIDs: instant checkouts, instant inventories, instant customer feedback to the retailer (meaning better product choices by the stores) and much better inventory management (meaning lower prices!). Never mind traceable warranties, potential theft prevention/insurance.

 

RFID Chip, also known as RFID tags, is being touted as the greatest invention for retailers since the bar code. A tiny computer chip can be embedded in any product for sale, or the package it comes in, to uniquely identify it. In a store such as Wal-Mart, a company seriously interested in the technology, an RFID scanner sends out a radio signal, and each chip responds. The retailer has just taken inventory, saving a great deal of work. As great as this may sound, there is a dark side to this technology.

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A leading edge reference for this rapidly evolving technology, this toolkit is of interest to practitioners in auto ID and IT designing RFID products and end-users of RFID technology, computer and electronics engineers in security system development and microchip designers, automation, industrial and transport engineers and materials handling specialists.

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  7. Four-Step Plan for Adopting RFID
  8. Security in RFID
  9. Risks on the Use of RFID on Consumer Products
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