Close WindowRFID Update for Thursday, January 31st
Thursday, January 31, 2008
Issue 768
Will Smith, Editor

Today's RFID Update
1. Featured Sponsor: Motorola
2. Editor's Note
3. Classified Listings
4. Top Story: An Overview of RFID Education at the College Level
5. Vertical News, Sponsors: Ferroxtag

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Editor's Note: Today's top story is an overview of RFID education at the college level, which has seen a dramatic spread over the last few years, with engineering, business, and IT departments offering coursework in the technology. Next week RFID Update will publish a listing of college-level schools and programs.

Identec Solutions has acquired Norway's Wtek, a provider of RFID workplace safety and security solutions for the tunnel engineering, oil, gas & mining, and offshore development industries. Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed.

Convergent Software has released diagnostic and simulator software targeted at end users implementing baggage tagging applications in the airline industry. For more details, see the announcement.

Lastly, Blue Vector, a manufacturer of automatic identification and sensor network appliances, has announced that its RFID-related revenue more than tripled in 2007. Much of the increased business was attributable to major deployments by Fortune 500 clients, according to the company.

An Overview of RFID Education at the College Level

Today's college students can leave school with something most who went before them couldn't: training and education in RFID. RFID-related courses are available to students from the community college to postgraduate levels, and there are a wide range of educational opportunities in between. RFID education isn't just for students; several hundred professors have also received training on how they can incorporate RFID into their own curricula.

"In our classes we're not debating if RFID is going to come. We focus on how our students can make it work and integrate it into systems in the real world," Dr. Erick Jones of the University of Nebraska-Lincoln told RFID Update. "We try to help our students understand RFID is here to stay."

Jones directs one of the more established university education programs. Nebraska offers a course focused on RFID, RFID in Logistics, but also covers RFID in other engineering and business classes. The university has an extensive RFID lab stocked with RFID and material handling equipment that students use for coursework. Jones also co-authored a just-released textbook, RFID in Logistics: A Practical Introduction, that he hopes will introduce RFID to logistics and material handling classes at other schools. Demand for the Nebraska RFID course has been so high that the university will soon begin offering an online version through its extended education program.

RFID courses are typically offered by university engineering, business, and IT departments. A few schools offer RFID certificate programs: Middlesex Community College in Massachusetts has a certificate program geared toward preparing students to install and service RFID equipment, while Boise State University and the University of Alaska Anchorage have a joint graduate certificate program in supply chain management with a strong RFID focus.

Many more schools offer specific RFID courses, and reference RFID in other classes. More still hold lectures, workshops, and other events on various aspects of RFID technology. Several dozen schools around the world have RFID labs, which are often used by students as part of their class work and may also be used for research and commercial services. (RFID Update has a listing of more than 50 private, public, and university-based RFID labs here.)

There do not appear to be any universities offering degrees in RFID, which one educator thinks is a good thing. "We don't offer a degree in RFID, and I'm not aware of anyone who does," said Dr. Bill Hardgrave of the University of Arkansas, which has a large RFID research center and education program. "We intentionally don't offer an RFID degree, because we don't want our graduates to be too narrowly focused. If all goes well, eight or ten years from now RFID will be ubiquitous."

According to Jones at Nebraska, most university-based RFID classes are offered through business departments, followed by engineering departments, with a much smaller number in IT departments. Growing RFID adoption in many industries is probably why the technology is increasingly being studied in business departments. Jones directs an engineering-based program, and worries that non-technical courses may create unrealistic expectations about RFID technology. "My big concern is that a lot of colleges seem to be jumping on the RFID bandwagon," Jones said. "They could be doing RFID a disservice by focusing on its future uses and benefits. Others schools take a more holistic approach and help students understand where and how RFID should best be used."

Few businesses anywhere were using RFID more than 20 years ago when Dr. James Fales at Ohio University in Athens, Ohio, first began offering engineering students instruction in the technology. Ohio U. was one of the first, if not the first, colleges to include RFID and other automatic identification technologies in its curriculum. Today most university-based RFID education can be traced back to Fales and Ohio U. because of the unique nature of the university's programs. Besides teaching students and operating a technology lab, for the past 21 years Fales has conducted the AIDC Technical Institute, a weeklong summer program where professors from around the world come to learn about RFID and other technologies and how they can incorporate them in their curricula. Between 250 and 300 professors are alumni of the program.

"But that isn't really reflective of the number of people we've impacted. To get that you have to multiply the number of professors by the number of students they teach," said Dr. Kevin Berbisso, who took over the program for the recently retired Fales and is also director of the Ohio University Center for Automatic Identification.

Fales' efforts to promote AIDC education earned him the industry's Percival Award in 1998. Many alumni of the AIDC Technical Institute have gone on to start AIDC courses and research at their own universities.

Today there are probably more RFID classes and programs at universities than ever before. Next week RFID Update will publish a listing of college-level schools and programs.

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 Asset Tracking
Sponsored by Ferroxtag
Large Swiss Library System Implementing RFID
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Tracking Lab Rats with RFID
 Retail & CPG
World's Largest Item-Level RFID Application Launches
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Sam's Club Suppliers May Face RFID Fines from Wal-Mart
 RTLS & Active RFID
New Pricing Model Offers Rent-to-Own RTLS Systems
Motorola Invests in Semi-passive RFID
UWB Finding a Place in the RTLS Market
 Supply Chain & Logistics
Greek 3PL Sees Major Benefits at All-RFID Warehouse
50+ RFID Labs and Test Centers Identified Worldwide
RFID Centers Offer a Chance to Try Before You Buy
 Pharmaceutical & Healthcare
Disagreement Awaits Imminent HF Gen2 RFID Standard
Impinj Demos New Approach for Pharma RFID Tagging
TAGSYS Announces Pre-Standard HF Gen2 Suite
 Middleware & Software Systems
Impinj Claims RFID Tag Direction Victory
UK Organizations Seek RFID Pilot Partners
Microsoft's RFID Offering a "Watershed Moment"
 Defense & Government
US Gov Sets Controversial RFID Passport Card Specs
Solar Power Helps RFID Track Anywhere Under the Sun
Dayton, Ohio Investing $1.4M to Support RFID Firms
RFID Tags & Labels
Ferroxtag HF tags: Smart on Metal!
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Employment
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Research & Whitepapers
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Upcoming Events
RFID World Asia 2008, 8 to 11 April, Suntec Singapore
RFID World Asia 2008 is THE event for finding out the transforming power of RFID for your business and its future. Sign up now for RFID Asia Summit 2008, targeted at senior-level executives; to understand and reap the benefits of this new business tool. For more information go to www.terrapinn.com/2008/rfid
SCAN & RFID CHINA 2008, June 19-21, Guangzhou, China
As one of the earliest, most specialized and authoritative exhibitions in China, approved and supported directly from State Ministry, the 8th SCAN & RFID CHINA 2008 will present you the impressive up-dated development and market of RFID technology in rising China. To know more, please go to www.scan-china.com.
5th Annual DoD RFID Summit - Feb 26-27 - Arlington, VA
If you conduct business with the Department of Defense (DoD), you need to be at the DoD RFID Summit to stay abreast of the latest technology developments and take advantage of the "roll-up-your-sleeves" RFID implementation guidance that will be delivered for DoD personnel and DoD suppliers! Register now at www.DoDRFIDsummit.com.
RFID Smart Labels USA - Boston, MA - February 20-21, 2008
RFID Smart Labels USA 2008; the seventh annual analyst-driven event covers the hot RFID sectors, full technology analysis and market insight. February 20-21, 2008, in Boston, MA. Visit www.IDTechEx.com/USA to find out more and register.
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RFID Update is the RFID industry daily. Launched in early 2004 to provide timely analysis of RFID industry news, RFID Update publishes editorial briefings every weekday for the growing ranks of top level executives involved in the deployment of RFID. Each issue delivers the breaking news and analysis most pertinent to successful RFID implementations, allowing readers to understand global RFID developments as they happen.

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