It's unlikely that these tags could be used to track your location in any meaningful way, but they still have lots of uses that are changing the tire industry.
RFID chips have quietly migrated from factory floors into the rubber that meets the road, turning tires into data points long before most drivers noticed. The technology has been embedded in products ...
From manufacturing to recycling, tire makers are embedding new tech into modern tires. It's more common than you think and ...
The public image of RFID (radio frequency identification) as a secretive tool of big business and government could improve if open source groups get involved in developing RFID standards, according to ...
In the world of modern electronic devices, few products have seen faster adoption rates than wearable devices. With new sensor technology, multiple interface capabilities, customer-defined parameters ...
A group of researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) have developed a system that uses radio-frequency identification (RFID) tags to locate moving, tagged objects within ...
Don't carry RFID? You might be surprised; the short-range ID technology is currently found in everything from US passports to swipeless credit cards to public transit passes to World Cup tickets to ...