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Date: 2004-05-06
US: Sun Microsystems steigt in RFID-Produktion ein
Sun plant in Dallas/Texas eine Fabrik zur Produktion von RFID-Tags.
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Sun Microsystems to open smart-tag factory in Texas
DALLAS - Sun Microsystems plans to open a Dallas-area facility on Wednesday to test radio tags for tracking consumer product
s and improving inventory control in stores.
Sun is trying to help manufacturers who must meet a deadline set by Wal-Mart, the world's largest retailer, to use the track
ing technology in pallet shipments by January.
Wal-Mart and other retailers believe that radio frequency information, or RFID, technology could replace bar codes and help
them improve control of their inventory, cut costs and reduce theft.
[...]
At the 17,000-square-foot warehouse that Sun is leasing in suburban Carrollton, manufacturers such as Gillette Co. will load
up pallets of actual products in their packaging and run them through mock-ups of loading docks.
Technicians will test whether RFID tags in the pallets - and eventually on individual items - can be read by systems
that Wal-Mart and other retailers will use, said Larry Singer, Sun's senior vice president of global markets. Sun will give
manufacturers a stamp of approval if their shipments can be tracked successfully by the stores, he said.
Sun's technology partners in the venture include Nortel Networks, Texas Instruments and i2 Technologies.
Santa Clara, Calif.-based Sun expects to open a similar facility in Scotland in the next few months.
[...]
Experts believe that the tags could be cheap enough to be placed on individual products within about five years.
David Syzmanski, director of a retailing center at Texas A&M University, said retailers are waiting to see Wal-Mart's results before deciding whether to also require vendors to put tags on shipments.
'There will be a lot of bugs to work out,' he said.
Last week, Wal-Mart began testing RFID at a distribution facility and seven supercenters in the Dallas area. Eight suppliers are attaching the tags to shipments of 21 consumer products.
[...]
Sun picked the Dallas area for its U.S. test center partly because of the proximity to Wal-Mart headquarters in Bentonville, Ark.
Other retailers, including Target and Albertsons, are also talking to suppliers about using RFID technology.
The prospect of putting radio tags on individual items has raised alarms among privacy advocates, who warn they could be used to gather information about consumers who buy the items and take them home.
'There will be some push-back,' Syzmanski said. "Are we going to track consumers the rest of their lives?"
A Wal-Mart spokesman said the company won't use the technology to track consumer behavior.
The radio tags contain a chip that identifies a product or pallet shipment. At stores, instead of an employee using a handheld device to scan bar codes on incoming shipments, a radio signal will tell a computer when products arrive.
'So much of the supply-chain process is still manual,' Sun's Singer said. "When the products themselves can communicate as to shelf life and inventory control, you're going to see much greater efficiency in the system."
source:
http://www.usatoday.com/tech/techinvestor/techcorporatenews/2004-05-05-sun-rfid-tx_x.htm
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edited by Doser
published on: 2004-05-06
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