By
Staff
Wednesday, December 14 2005 09:47 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/communications/0,39044192,39298223,00.htm
RFID technology is on the upswing as businesses start to see ways it can
augment bar coding, according to a new report.
Worldwide spending on the emerging wireless tracking technology is set to
reach US$504 million this year, up more than one-third from 2004, market
researcher Gartner said Tuesday. Adoption will accelerate by 2007, with spending
pegged to hit US$3 billion by the end of the decade.
RFID, or radio frequency identification, has been hailed for its promise as a superior way to keep tabs on merchandise in
warehouses and retail outlets. Scanning of data-laden chips on pallets and
products would help keep inventories in order and assure buyers that they're not
paying money for counterfeit goods.
In Mississippi, the technology was used to help identify
victims of Hurricane Katrina.
It's also been denounced as a harbinger of a Big Brother society in which
personal privacy disappears, either because of voluminous record-keeping on
people's shopping habits and travel
patterns, or even because the chips could even end up under the skin.
Most uses so far have been limited to trial runs, but mandates are coming
from both the public and private sectors. The U.S. Department of Defense, for
instance, recently insisted that its suppliers of packaged rations, clothing,
personal-care items and weapon system repair parts radio-tag
products shipped to certain supply depots.
The Gartner report sticks to the mundane side of things, focusing on how RFID
would augment--rather than replace--ubiquitous bar codes.
While bar codes are better at collecting data in highly structured locales
such as warehouses, RFID tags will be useful in collecting data on mobile assets
and in unstructured business processes, including retail stores and hospitals,
Gartner said.
"Just because bar codes are used extensively in distribution centers does not
mean RFID will be," Jeff Woods, Gartner's research vice president, said in a
statement. "Businesses are beginning to discover business value in places where
they cannot use bar coding, which will be the force that moves RFID forward."
Woods pointed to the role of the Food and Drug Administration, which is
pushing for RFID tags to combat sales of fake pharmaceutical products. If the
FDA's regulatory activity proceeds, he said, widespread tagging could begin
around 2007.