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THE
WORLD'S RFID AUTHORITY
Wal-Mart Explores New RFID Form Factors
The
retailer is deploying handheld RFID interrogators and considering
wearable interrogators, and is close to adopting forklift readers.
By Mark Roberti
Jan.
25, 2006—Simon Langford, director of RFID strategy at Wal-Mart
Stores, said the retailer is rolling out handheld RFID interrogators
to help store associates pick products that need to be brought out
to the sales floor. He also said the chain was close to deploying
its first forklift interrogator and is in the early stages of looking
at wearable readers.
"In
2002, we were involved in the early implementation of RFID readers
as part of the Auto-ID Center field trial," Langford told attendees
of the RFID Academic Convocation, an invitation-only event held
Jan. 23-24 at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). "Those
early readers took hours to install and minutes to destroy. But
we learned a lot, and we have been applying that knowledge."
Simon Langford
Langford said Wal-Mart can now deploy interrogators at 20 read points
in a store or distribution center within hours. A few years ago,
it would have taken several days to complete the same installation.
One reason for the quicker completion time is that vendors have
introduced hardened portal systems that can be bolted to the floor,
as opposed to requiring end users to install supports for interrogator
antennas.
Wal-Mart
is also rolling out handheld RFID interrogators—mobile computers
that can scan a bar code or read an RFID tag. Store associates use
these devices to identify which items are out of stock and generate
lists of products to be brought out from the back of the store.
The devices beep more loudly as they approach an RFID tag, enabling
associates to find cases in the back room quickly.
Additionally,
Wal-Mart is close to deploying a forklift reader that could reduce
the need to install portal interrogators around dock doors at its
Sam's Club stores and, eventually, its distribution centers. The
forklift interrogators read tags on pallets the forklift is carrying.
The interrogators could also read shelf tags or location tags embedded
in the floor of the store or DC. This will enable Wal-Mart to streamline
business processes by enabling the retailer to track where a pallet
has been placed.
Langford
said Wal-Mart is in the early stages of investigating the use of
wearable RFID solutions. These might include interrogators attached
to associates' belts or vests. "The system could be reading
tags in the background and giving the associates information on
what they need to do," he said. "We need systems to help
people move product to the shelf. It's the last 50 yards [where
products are brought to the store shelves] that's the hardest."
Wal-Mart
is currently upgrading its RFID systems to the second-generation
Electronic Product Code standard—which, Langford said, would
bring performance improvements. "When we said we needed an
EPC standard that would work globally, we didn't need a global tag
that offered a small improvement in performance. We needed a step
change," he says. "I'm pleased to say Gen 2 is a step
change in performance."
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