Charles Walton, the Father of RFID
Roland Piquepaille writes "In a very interesting article, the San Jose Mercury News tells us about Charles Walton, the man behind the radio frequency identification technology (RFID). Since his first patent about it in 1973, Walton, now 83 years old, collected about $3 million from royalties coming from his patents. Unfortunately for him, his latest patent about RFID expired in the mid-1990s. So he will not make any money from the billions of RFID tags that will appear in the years to come. But he continues to invent and his latest patent about a proximity card with incorporated PIN code protection was granted in June 2004. Maybe he'll be luckier with this one. This overview contains some excerpts of the original article. It also contains tips to search for Walton's patents and an image of the front page of his first patent."
Good, and very informative article. Can't help but thinking that the guy had his heart and mind in the right place when he invented this. I don't think he envisioned big-brother style monitoring as a use. ..and I also liked the advertising on the side of the blog ("Reach Technologically savvy people"), and how it has anti Bush-Cheney books listed. Apparently those of us who are techno-literate are also anti-Bush...
And actually I am. Go Kerry! Lesser of two evils!
http://thepoliticalgeek.com/blog/ Politics for Geeks.