Close WindowRFID Update for Tuesday, June 16th
Tuesday, June 16, 2009
Issue 1043
Will Smith, Editor

Today's RFID Update
1. Featured Sponsor: Military Logistics Summit
2. Editor's Note
3. Classified Listings
4. Top Story: RFID Tracks Mussel Beds in Spain
5. Vertical News

Military Logistics Summit - Jun 8-11 - Vienna, VA

Editor's Note: Today's top story is a Spanish aquaculture company's current pilot to test passive RFID for tracking mussel beds.

Inlay manufacturer UPM Raflatac and Hansaprint, a leading printing house in the Nordic market, have partnered to develop opportunities for NFC technology. Among other initiatives, the two companies will launch an online service to allow low-volume orders of NFC tags and labels. The announcement is the latest in a series of moves by UPM Raflatac to position itself for the growth of the nascent NFC market (see Raflatac Positions Itself for NFC Adoption for more).

Lastly, IDENTEC SOLUTIONS announced its selection by container terminal operator DP World to deploy an active RFID solution for truck identification and access control at all of DP World's terminals in Australia.

RFID Tracks Mussel Beds in Spain

  By Brian Albright

A family-owned mussel business in Galicia, Spain, has teamed with researchers at the University of Vigo to test RFID for tracking mussel cultivation.

The mussel company, Concepción Suárez Fernández, collaborated with the Systems Engineering and Automation Department at the university to design a system that uses passive RFID tags to identify the ropes that the mussels grow on.

"The lack of IT in this industry has been a problem for a long time," says Jorge Nuñez, one of the owners of Concepción Suárez Fernández. "We need to know exactly what was on the mussel beds, how long they had been there, and we need to be able to forecast growth so we can plan our sales.

"We were aware that RFID was being used in other industries, but as far as we knew it hadn't been used in this particular industry," continues Nuñez, who has an engineering degree from the University of Vigo. "We felt that it would be a very good tool to simplify tracking the ropes themselves."

The University of Vigo is heading up the feasibility study on the technology and designed the test. University staff also wrote the software for the application.

Young mussels are "seeded" onto the ropes (which are then hung on a floating platform) and mature in the water until they are harvested. The platforms are approximately 500 square meters in size, and each rope can weigh anywhere from 150 to 300 kilograms.

"You can have up to 500 ropes on each platform that have been hung at different points in time, and they all look exactly the same," Nuñez says. "We need a way to distinguish them. If you forget some of the ropes, the mussels can grow too big and fall to the sea floor. If there is a storm, some of the ropes can disappear."

The RFID tags are attached to each rope and contain a unique ID number. A software application tracks all of the relevant information about the mussels on the rope so that the company knows when it should be harvested. Nuñez says that RFID could potentially make it easier to track the mussel stock.

"There are several steps in the process," Nuñez says. "When there are too many mussels for one rope, you split it in two. We can track when we put those ropes back on the mussel bed again. We can track the origin of the ropes, because they could be mixed from different places. That allows us at the end of the process to know the distribution of where the mussels came from, and how long they've been in the water."

The company has deployed tags from Premo Group (HARSH-TAG-150), Confidex (Halo) and Intermec Technologies (Large Rigid Tag). All of the tags are UHF and Gen2 compliant. The tags were designed to withstand the harsh conditions of the mussel beds (cold weather, high moisture), and so far the company has been able to read all of the tags in the test using a Motorola MC9090-G handheld RFID reader.

The RFID project, called SABATE, was partially funded by the local government's Galician Research, Development and Technological Innovation Plan.

According to Nuñez, the test is scheduled to last the length of the life of the first set of mussel ropes, which is typically one year. If successful, he hopes to deploy RFID across all four of the mussel beds the company operates.

Forward this to a colleague | Request reprints: reprints at rfidupdate dot com

 Retail & CPG
Dairy Queen Pilots RFID-Based Mobile Marketing Platform
RFID Baby Born from Checkpoint-OATSystems Marriage
Grocer Uses RFID to Increase Customer Loyalty
 Asset Tracking
SaaS Suits Fluensee for RFID Solution Sales
STMicroelectronics Offers Active RFID Development Kit
Mid South RFID Converts for Changing Market
 RTLS & Active RFID
Savi Celebrates, Innovates with New RFID Products
SandLinks Announces Combo Tag-Reader RTLS Chips
CSL Has Long Range Plans for RFID Market
 Supply Chain & Logistics
New Belgium Brewing Hops to RFID for Keg Management
Vietnamese Seafood Industry to Test RFID
Saudi Post Updates RFID System for Carriers
 Pharmaceutical & Healthcare
RFID Tags Survive Hospital Sterilization
Reva Launches RTLS Solution Based on Passive RFID
EPCIS, RFID Effective in European Pharmaceutical Pilot
 Middleware & Software Systems
RFID Software Provider GlobeRanger Raises $8.3M
Microsoft's Mobile RFID Software Now Available
Checkpoint Buys OAT to Become One-Stop RFID Shop
 Defense & Government
Finnish Military Tests RFID for Triage Application
New Legislation Could Criminalize RFID Security Testing
New York May Regulate Retail RFID Use
RFID Tags & Labels
Invengo inlays with EAS. 224/512 bit – 5.8¢ and 7.2¢/5M
Invengo inlays use NXP UCODE chips to provide a unique custom command set, such as Electronic Article Surveillance (EAS). Long read range due to high chip sensitivity. Ease of tag assembly due to high chip input capacitance. Consistent performance on different materials. Tel 703.793.0085, visit www.invengo.com or click Info@invengo.com.
Handheld RFID Asset Tracking Software: NoxVault
The NoxVault RFID scanner finds assets over 20 feet away and can inventory about 1,000 items per minute -- if you're fast on your feet. NoxVault is great for tagging and tracking documents, PC's, laptops, and office equipment. Our handheld asset tracking RFID starter kit usually ships same-day for just $3,995.
Research & Whitepapers
2009 RFID Brand & Marketing Strategies Reports
The latest follow-up to RFID Update's well-regarded 2006 research, this 2009 companion set of reports includes the most recent Top-10 rankings of the current RFID leaders and provides marketing, branding, and advertising guidance to vendors of RFID products and services. Purchase the reports now.
Employment
RFID Recruiters - 100% Focused on RFID Recruiting
Whether your company is looking for the best RFID talent or you have the best RFID talent and are looking for the best RFID employer, RFID Recruiters offers the most focused approach to your objective. To learn how the RFID industry and the RFID job market are evolving, visit www.rfidrecruiters.com
Products & Services
Real-Time Business Intelligence from Omnitrol Networks
Meet the industry's most innovative award winning RFID solution that enables complete work-order traceability in manufacturing. Real-time web-based dashboards and multi-site monitoring for work-order pedigree and traceability, including proactive bottleneck management and real-time performance analytics optimizing shop-floor efficiency. All at the lowest TCO in the marketplace. www.omnitrol.com/WIP.
This email was intended for , who subscribed

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.

RFID Update Editor: Will Smith, editor at rfidupdate dot com
Press releases and public relations inquiries should be directed to Will.

To advertise in RFID Update, email advertising08 at rfidupdate dot com to request a media kit.

RFID Questions? Ask at RFID Talk (www.RFIDtalk.com).

Forward this issue of RFID Update to your colleagues, or tell them to subscribe free at: www.RFIDupdate.com

View all past issues of RFID Update in the archive.

Update your subscription settings: subscriptions08 at rfidupdate dot com

We take your privacy seriously. View our Privacy Policy here.

RFID Update -- The RFID Industry Daily
3213 Duke Street #266
Alexandria, VA 22314
http://www.rfidupdate.com



© 2008, ALX Technologies. All Rights Reserved.