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RFID: The Next Internet?

An anonymous reader writes "RFID Journal has an artricle about how an open source foundation is creating a new Internet based on RFID tags. 'The founders [RadioActive Foundation] liken the EPCglobal Network as a whole to the Internet, with RFID tags acting as URLs, and the tags' associated data being the Web site for that tag . The software the foundation develops, Michael Mealling adds, will act similarly to an Internet search engine. With Discovery Service software, for example, companies will be able to search for an RFID tag without requiring connected links between each point of the tag's travels.' Pretty neat concept, probably decades away."

4 of 121 comments (clear)

  1. Another CueCat? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    Hasn't this sort of thing been tried before and failed miserably?

    1. Re:Another CueCat? by scoove · · Score: 4, Informative
      Hasn't this sort of thing been tried before and failed miserably?

      Yes, but according to CueCat's official website, we should hang on to our devices:

      If you have a Cue Cat, save it. The patents and technology created by DigitalConvergence will again be available for business and consumer use.

      As I'm certain they're not talking about the evil open source drivers that came along and ruined their attempts to spy on all those scans. Perhaps it has something to do with these Digital Convergence patents lying out there in wait:
      • US 6,836.799: Method and apparatus for tracking user profile and habits on a global network
      • US 6,643,692: Method for controlling a computer using an embedded unique code in the content of video tape media

      Don't forget...

      The dream was to connect items in the physical world to the Internet, automatically.
      In January that dream hit a bump in the road and the servers were taken offline.
      They will scan again...
  2. The submitter got it wrong I think... by kenh · · Score: 5, Informative

    RFID can't "displace" or become "the next internet" anymore than barcodes can. RFID tags have no computation ability, no networking capabilities...

    RFID tags, at the lowest level emit a pre-programmed number when activated by RF energy (the resonate, if you will).

    There is a Dummies Guide on RFID - I expect it to be a big seller among the tin foil hat crowd ;^)

    --
    Ken
  3. Re:RadioActive by Otter · · Score: 4, Informative
    Are we talking about tracking items with RFID tags, and are talking about being able to track them once they've left the store?

    Unless you have a scanner in your home and connect it to their network, I don't see why it would.

    Basically, this is a new level of inventory and shipment tracking. The company is overhyping it with their analogy to the internet, and it seems to be impressing people in the opposite direction from the intended.