書誌事項

RFID for dummies

Patrick J. Sweeney II

(--For dummies)

Wiley Publishing, c2005

1st ed

大学図書館所蔵 件 / 2

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注記

Includes index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

Many companies have asked suppliers to begin using RFID (radio frequency identification) tags by 2006 RFID allows pallets and products to be scanned at a greater distance and with less effort than barcode scanning, offering superior supply-chain management efficiencies This unique plain-English resource explains RFID and shows CIOs, warehouse managers, and supply-chain managers how to implement RFID tagging in products and deploy RFID scanning at a warehouse or distribution center Covers the business case for RFID, pilot programs, timelines and strategies for site assessments and deployments, testing guidelines, privacy and regulatory issues, and more

目次

  • Introduction 1 About This Book 1 Who This Book Is For 1 You Don't Need a Slide Rule and Pocket Protector to Use This Book 2 How This Book Is Organized 2 Part I: Now That You Can Spell RFID, Here's the Rest of the Story 3 Part II: Ride the Electromagnetic Wave: The Physics of RFID 3 Part III: Fitting an RFID Application into Your World 3 Part IV: Raising the Beams for Your Network 4 Part V: How to Speak Bean Counter 4 Part VI: The Part of Tens 4 Icons Used in This Book 5 Part I: Now That You Can Spell RFID, Here's the Rest of the Story 7 Chapter 1: Taking the Mystery out of RFID 9 What Is RFID? 9 The origins of RFID in inventory tracking 10 Tracking goods with EPC codes 10 Sizing Up the Benefits of RFID 11 Tracking individual items with serialized data 12 Reducing human intervention 13 Moving more goods through the supply chain 14 Capturing information in real time 14 Increasing security 15 Mandates, Womendates, Blind Dates - Forcing Efficiency 16 What are the major mandates? 16 Responding to the mandates 17 Calling All Physicists! Calling All Physicists! 18 Finding a physics expert 19 The basic physics of RFID 19 Finding Success with Four Ps in a Pod 22 Planning 22 Physics 24 Pilot 26 Production 27 A Ride in the Time Machine 28 Chapter 2: Auto-ID Technologies: Why RFID Is King of the Hill 31 Planning an Auto-ID Strategy for the Times 32 Comparing the major players in Auto-ID: Bar codes, contact memory, and RFID 34 Crafting an Auto-ID strategy for your business (Or, why RFID is the wave of the future) 41 To EPC or Not to Be: Unraveling the Words, Words, Words of the Electronic Product Code 44 How EPC is different from UPC 45 Why an EPC RFID tag doesn't contain more information 47 How the EPC works 48 How the EPC prepared for the future, and who oversees that 52 Addressing Privacy Concerns 53 Chapter 3: Making Basic Decisions about Your RFID System 55 Midas Touch Points: Where RFID Impacts Your Organization 56 Outlining how RFID affects your business processes 57 Determining how RFID will affect your facility 60 Evaluating your technical needs 61 What's the Frequency, Kenneth? 64 Understanding the difference between licensed and unlicensed frequencies 65 Examining the most common frequencies in RFID 65 Frequencies, power, and countries 67 Beyond UHF: Looking toward the future 68 Speed, Accuracy, or Distance - Pick Two 69 Designing for the right read distance 70 Reads - tell me how fast and how many 71 Reading multiple tags at once - accuracy considerations 72 Now What about the Tags and Objects? 73 Part II: Ride the Electro-magnetic Wave: The Physics of RFID 75 Chapter 4: What Makes Up an RFID Network 77 Elements of a Basic RFID System 77 Everything starts with the tag 79 Antennas send and receive radio waves 79 Readers tell the antennas what to do 80 The middleware transforms the system into a network of objects 80 Time to Make Some Waves - Electromagnetic Waves 81 Frequency is a measurement 83 History may repeat itself, but virginity comes only once 84 Fields: Electrical and magnetic, near and far 84 Creating resonance between the antennas and the field 85 Chapter 5: Understanding How Technology Becomes a Working System 87 Anatomy of a Passive Tag: Understanding How It Works and Choosing the Right One 88 How do tags receive and transmit information? 88 How does a tag antenna work, and how do you choose among the different kinds? 90 How does the integrated circuit affect performance? 92 Some tag examples for the geek in you 94 Tracking the Tags with a Reader 95 Holler back, young 'un - Transmitting and receiving signals 95 The DSP chip: Examining the brain of a reader 96 Ring around the dipole and other bad antenna stories 98 Air in Her Face - Blowing Sweet Nothings 100 Chapter 6: Seeing Different RFID Systems at Work 103 Setting Up RFID Interrogation Zones 103 Coming and going - Reading at a dock door 104 Your gateway to good reads - Other portals 106 Keep on rollin' - Setting up RFID at a conveyor 108 That's a wrap - Interrogating at a shrink-wrap station 109 One at a time - Reading objects on a shelf 110 From Ski Resorts to Airlines: Applying RFID in the Real World 112 Ski resorts 112 Law enforcement 113 Pharmaceuticals 113 Additional business applications 114 Part III: Fitting an RFID Application into Your World 117 Chapter 7: Seeing the Invisible: The Site Assessment 119 Planning for Your Site Assessment 120 Getting the right test equipment 122 Setting up for RF testing 124 Measuring for AEN during Normal Operations (And Beyond) 126 Testing key points around the warehouse 127 I've been a wild rover for many's a year 127 I don't hear anything
  • time to make my own noise 129 Solving interference problems 130 Testing to Plan Your RFID Installation 130 Gathering your equipment 131 Comparing the perfect signal to the actual signal 132 Setting up the equipment 133 Conducting the test 134 Putting your results to use 136 Chapter 8: Testing One, Two, Three: Developing Your Own Lab 139 To Lab or Not to Lab 140 Beyond a Swanky White Lab Coat: The Tools You Need for Successful Testing 141 Setting Up Your Lab 142 X-ray marks the spot: Find the perfect location 143 Physics eye for the lab guy: Design the physical layout 145 Set up the test equipment 148 Build specific test equipment 151 Develop and implement standardized test procedures 153 Chapter 9: Tag, You're It: Testing for Best Tag Design and Placement 159 Ready, Set, Test! 160 Looking at the Material Composition of the Items You're Tagging 162 Examining RF transparent, reflecting, and absorbing materials 163 Using the RF friendliness pyramid to understand the optimal spot for testing 164 Choosing a Tag to Test 166 Testing Tags in an Applications Test Facility 168 Setting up the testing environment 170 Carrying out the test 170 Frequency Response Characterization: Testing Tags with Physics 171 Encoding and Applying Tags 174 Tag and ship 174 Inline production application 176 The Secrets of Read Success 177 Avoiding cross talk 177 Ensuring high-speed reads 178 Executing full pallet reads 178 Chapter 10: Hooked on Phonics: Reader Testing, Selection, and Installation 181 Choosing a Hand-held, Mobile, or Fixed-location Reader 182 Reading between the Lines: Critical Buying Criteria 183 Consider all the costs involved 184 Test reader performance 186 Assess connectivity 192 Evaluate how well the reader can be fine-tuned 196 Installing a Reader and Antennas 201 Mount the reader 202 Mount and connect the antennas 203 Power up the reader 203 Test the interrogation zone for RF path loss 204 Chapter 11: Middle Where? It's Not Just about the Readers 205 Filter, Smooth, Route: Understanding What You Need Middleware to Do 206 Exploring Middleware Vendors and Their Offerings 208 Piecing Together a Middleware Architecture 210 No more tiers: Grasping the many levels of a middleware architecture 211 Taking stock of existing investments and skills 213 Early bird or late bloomer? Prioritizing your middleware needs 215 Getting the Most from Your RFID Middleware 216 Part IV: Raising the Beams for Your Network 219 Chapter 12: From Pilot to Admiral: Deploying RFID Successfully 221 Creating a Pilot Project Plan 222 Start with your major tasks and timeline 223 Deliverable tracker 224 There's always an issue with you: Tracking and resolving problems 225 There is no I in team (but there is an M and an E) 226 Factors for a Successful Pilot Test 227 Clearly defined scope 227 Experienced project manager 228 Key executive support 228 User involvement 228 Specific measurements and metrics 229 Risk mitigation 229 Phased approach 229 Moving from Pilot to Production 231 Getting the most of your pilot data: The project debrief 231 Tips for a successful production system 232 Chapter 13: Getting Set to Administer and Maintain Your System 233 Configuring and Setting Up Tag Readers 234 Before you begin 234 Stepping through a reader setup 235 Creating configuration classes 236 Getting the Digits 238 A simple hierarchy for assigning numbers 238 Allocating unique numbers across many lines and locations 239 Applying Tags to Objects 240 Applying tags without breaking them 240 North by northwest as the corrugation travels: Orienting tags on objects 241 Sending Objects through Your Business 242 Lining up tags and readers 242 Just like the neonatal ward: Handle with care 243 School's in Session - Training Your Staff 244 Starting readers manually 244 Identifying and responding to missed reads 245 Reinforcing processes versus changing them 246 Explaining how RFID affects employees 247 Chapter 14: Ping-pong, the Tags Are Gone: How to Monitor Your RFID Network 249 Why Monitor an RFID Station? 250 Setting up Two Types of Monitoring 251 Checking That a Reader Is Active 251 Choosing the right method 252 A simple human interface: Enabling operators to monitor the system 252 Measuring and Interpreting System Behavior 255 Building a statistical monitoring approach 255 Breaking data into time intervals 257 Measure 1: The average tag traffic volume (ATTV) 259 Measure 2: Read errors to total reads (RETR) 261 Measure 3: Read error change rates (RECR) 262 Measure 4: Actual versus predicted traffic rate (APTR) 262 Measure 5: Mean time between failure (MTBF) 263 Monitoring as you expand your RFID network 265 Setting up a monitoring system 265 Part V: How to Speak Bean Counter 269 Chapter 15: Making the Business Case 271 Finding the First-Round Draft Picks for Your RFID Team 271 A Game Plan Is More Than Xs and Os - Use a Proven Methodology 274 Step 1 Refine the process and conduct team training 275 Step 2 Determine scope and assumptions 276 Step 3 Determine drivers, strategies, and enablers 277 Step 4 Identify and assess business processes and interfaces 279 Step 5 Identify complementary or competing business initiatives 280 Step 6 Identify strategic and economic benefits 281 Step 7 Develop investment requirements 284 Step 8 Develop an implementation road map 285 Step 9 Communicate the business case 286 Chapter 16: Fitting RFID into Strategic Plans 289 Just in Time to Justify: Overcoming Skepticism with Strategic Thinking 290 Calculating ROI - A Tactical Approach to RFID 291 Cha-ching! Finding ways to save with RFID 292 Tallying up the estimated costs 300 Putting together a costs/benefits analysis 303 ROI as a tool for strategic expansion 303 Tag and You're It: RFID as a Competitive Strategy 304 Chapter 17: What to Look for When Considering Outsourcing 307 Why Outsource Your RFID Network? 308 Identifying and Avoiding the Risks 308 Is Outsourcing Right for You? 309 Do your goals and timeline indicate a clear need to outsource? 310 Do you need to run or own the system? 312 Analyzing your resources 314 Money, money, money: Comparing outsourcing and internal costs 316 Performance anxiety: Can you build a network that works? 317 Finding the Perfect Match 318 Figuring out the RFP process 318 Spelling out your needs in an RFP 320 Selecting potential outsourcing partners 326 Evaluating responses to your RFP 327 Sealing the Deal with an SLA 327 Drafting the initial SLA 328 Negotiating an SLA with a vendor 331 Part VI: The Part of Tens 333 Chapter 18: Ten (Or So) Equipment Vendors 335 Alien Technology 335 ACCU-SORT 336 Applied Wireless Identifications (AWID) 336 FOX IV Technologies 337 Impinj 337 Intermec Technologies 338 MARKEM 339 Symbol Technologies, Inc (Formerly Matrics) 339 ODIN technologies 340 OMRON electronics 340 SAMSys Technologies 341 Texas Instruments (TI) 341 ThingMagic 342 Chapter 19: Ten Web Sites for Information on RFID 343 RFID Journal Online 344 EPCglobal 344 IDTechEx 345 RFID Solutions Online 345 RFID Exchange 345 RFID Update 346 Auto-ID Labs 346 Auto-ID Lab @ Adelaide 346 The RFID Gazette 347 UCLA's RFID@WINMEC site 347 Slashdot 347 Chapter 20: Ten Tips from the Experts 349 Chris Fennig, ODIN technologies 349 Joe White, Symbol Technologies (Formerly Matrics, Inc.) 350 Duncan McCollum, Computer Sciences Corporation (CSC) 351 Dr Daniel Engels, MIT Auto-ID Labs 352 Dr Patrick King, Michelin Tire Corporation 353 Steve Kowalke, ACCU-SORT Systems 353 Team Tag-IT, Texas Instruments 354 Kevin MacDonald, Lead RFID Architect, Sun Microsystems 354 Mark Nelson, Savi Technology 355 Chapter 21: Ten (Or So) RFID Standards and Protocols 357 EAN.UCC 357 EPCglobal 358 UCCnet 358 ISO/IEC JT1/SC17 359 ISO/IEC JTC1/SC31/WG4 360 AIAG 361 Container Shipments 361 Container Security Initiative (CSI) 361 Smart and Secure Tradelanes 362 Appendix: Glossary of Electrical, Magnetic, and Other Scientific Terms 363 Index 373

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