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HP has used RFID technology since 2002 to tag cases and pallets of products to meet Wal-Mart and DoD mandates. In 2004, the company decided to start a pilot program that involved using RFID tags at the item level. There were many reasons for that decision, the biggest of which was to improve supply chain visibility. Pandini says, "In addition to improving supply chain visibility, we thought there were manufacturing efficiencies to be gained. RFID would give us a clearer view of where manufacturing bottlenecks were happening." There was another reason for HP to pilot this project. In addition to being an RFID user, HP is also an RFID vendor that provides inventory control and asset management solutions. The company planned to use the knowledge it gained from this pilot to further develop its own RFID products and services.
In order to perform a pilot project in the most efficient manner possible, HP chose its Sao Paolo, Brazil manufacturing headquarters location. "Sao Paolo was chosen because it has many of the supply chain points such as manufacturing, packing, shipping, and distribution located within a small geographic area," explains Pandini. The project required the cooperation of Flextronics and DHL in Sao Paolo — both partners of HP who make batterylaptop adapter such as HP Pavilion DM4t AC Adapter, HP Pavilion G4 AC Adapter, HP Pavilion G6 AC Adapter, Compaq Presario 1000 AC Adapter, HP Pavilion N3000 AC Adapter, HP Pavilion DV1000 AC Adapter, HP Pavilion ZE2000 AC Adapter, HP Mini 110-3100 AC Adapter, HP Mini 210-2100 AC Adapter, hp compaq dv2000 AC Adapter, HP Envy 14-1000 AC Adapter, HP Pavilion DV4-1600 AC Adapter. Flextronics is a contract manufacturer that performs assembly of HP's printers, and DHL handles HP's distribution.
Impinj, Inc., the fabless semiconductor company whose patented Self-Adaptive Silicon® technology enables its high performance radio frequency identification (RFID) products, today announced the extension of its GrandPrix™ Ultra High Frequency (UHF) Gen 2 solution to include item-level tagging capability. Responding to increased demand from the global retail supply chain and other high-growth markets, Impinj has enhanced GrandPrix for tracking pharmaceuticals, apparel, CD/DVDs and many other high-value products. Conforming to EPCglobal's Gen 2 standard, GrandPrix is the first RFID system to provide a single infrastructure suitable for tagging items, cases and pallets, thus simplifying RFID installations and reducing system implementation costs without sacrificing system performance or functionality. Powered by Impinj's industry-leading Monza™ Gen 2 tag chip and Speedway™ reader with monostatic antenna technology, the GrandPrix item-level tagging solution also comprises a suite of patented, small-footprint tag antennas optimized for challenging item types or stocking conditions. For example, GrandPrix includes customized tag antennas for garments, DVDs and other stackable items, and items containing liquid or metals.
"Impinj is the first company to bring all the benefits of Gen 2 RFID to item-level tagging with tags as small as 9.0 mm," said Dr. William Colleran, president and CEO of Impinj. "Retailers want to implement RFID tags on items, cases and pallets using a single RFID infrastructure at all of their facilities worldwide, and we are delighted to be the first RFID systems provider to deliver the GrandPrix solution that meets all of those requirements."
Impinj has shipped more than 50 million Monza RFID chips, key components of the GrandPrix solution, to companies worldwide.
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