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ABSTRACT
Many modern technologies give the impression they work by magic,
particularly when they operate automatically and their mechanisms
are invisible. A technology called RFID (radio frequency
identification), which is relatively new to the mass market, has
exactly this characteristic and for many people seems a lot like
magic. RFID is an electronic tagging technology that allows an
object, place, or person to be automatically identified at a
distance without a direct line-of-sight, using an electromagnetic
challenge/response exchange. Typical applications include labeling
products for rapid checkout at a point-of-sale terminal, inventory
tracking, animal tagging, timing marathon runners, secure
automobile keys, and access control for secure facilities.
CITED BY 12
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César Marcon , José Carlos Palma , Fabiano Hessel , Eduardo Bezerra , Guilherme Rohde , Carlos Reif , Luciano Azevedo , Carolina Metzler, A 915 MHz UHF low power RFID tag, Proceedings of the 20th annual conference on Integrated circuits and systems design, September 03-06, 2007, Copacabana, Rio de Janeiro
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Babak Hodjat , Siamak Hodjat , Nick Treadgold , Ing-Marie Jonsson, CRUSE: a context reactive natural language mobile interface, Proceedings of the 2nd annual international workshop on Wireless internet, p.20-es, August 02-05, 2006, Boston, Massachusetts
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Swapna Dontharaju , Shenchih Tung , James T. Cain , Leonid Mats , Marlin H. Mickle , Alex K. Jones, A design automation and power estimation flow for RFID systems, ACM Transactions on Design Automation of Electronic Systems (TODAES), v.14 n.1, p.1-31, January 2009
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