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  2. Scalable 100% Yield Production of Conductive Graphene Inks |…

    https://www.graphene.cam.ac.uk/news/100-yield-scalable-production-of-conductive-graphene-inks
    17 Jun 2024: These inks can also be used to create novel composites, coatings and energy storage devices. ... The inks also give an excellent sheet resistance below 2 Ω/sq, suitable for RFID antennas and electrodes in optoelectronic or energy storage devices.
  3. Paul J. Hecht and J. B. Lethbridge, eds., Spenser in the Moment

    https://www.english.cam.ac.uk/spenseronline/review/item/46.1.8/
    Rfid Injectable Transponders 7 months, 1 week ago. We are the top Rfid Injectable Transponders. ... RFID readers are devices that have a chip that can read the Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) data.
  4. Liveblog from SIGCOMM13 – Day 1 « syslog

    https://www.syslog.cl.cam.ac.uk/2013/08/13/liveblog-from-sigcomm13-day-1/
    5 Nov 2023: 2 Decoding on a battery free device. #3 Designing a distributed MAC protocol for battery free devices. ... PinIt - 10-15cm RFID in multi path environments. Focuses on proximity to reference devices.
  5. Paul J. Hecht and J. B. Lethbridge, eds., Spenser in the Moment

    https://www.english.cam.ac.uk/spenseronline/review/item/46.1.8/%22https%3A/inforinn.com/%22%3EInforinn%3C/a%3E%20It%27s%20a%20dedicated%20platform%20for%20global%20readers%3C/p/
    Rfid Injectable Transponders 7 months, 1 week ago. We are the top Rfid Injectable Transponders. ... RFID readers are devices that have a chip that can read the Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) data.
  6. PowerPoint Presentation

    https://www-smartinfrastructure.eng.cam.ac.uk/system/files/documents/big_data_pres_a_philip_woodall_10092015.pdf
    product• Enabled by automated capture devices: sensors, RFID, Bar. Codes, point of sale capture devices, GPS Location data, smart phones…. •
  7. Accelerate Cambridge associates - Accelerate Cambridge people -…

    https://www.jbs.cam.ac.uk/entrepreneurship/programmes/accelerate-cambridge/people/associates/
    He has industry experience having previously worked as a researcher for a major multinational electronics company developing memory devices. ... His areas of expertise include semiconductor devices, embedded systems, power electronics, automotive
  8. Poster Abstract: Wildlife and Environmental Monitoring usingRFID and…

    https://mobile-systems.cl.cam.ac.uk/papers/sensys09.pdf
    4 Sep 2009: General TermsAlgorithms, Design. KeywordsWireless Sensor Networks, RFID Technology, In-. Network Storage, Duty Cycling. ... lifetime, sen-sor devices are still not able to compete with tiny RFID tagswhen it comes to lifetime and physical size [1].
  9. Observability_ecc_2003_011202

    https://www.ifm.eng.cam.ac.uk/uploads/Research/DIAL/Observability.pdf
    28 Mar 2012: In fact the requirement is rather more subtle than this in that many automated product type sensing devices – such as RFID. ... 1999, RFID Handbook, John Wiley & Sons. Haberman, A, 2001, Twenty-Five Years Behind Bars, Harvard.
  10. Enhancing Identity withLocation A Study of the Behavior and ...

    https://www.ifm.eng.cam.ac.uk/uploads/Research/DIAL/HFM_MPHIL_THESIS.pdf
    28 Mar 2012: vergence of identity and location. This background will put RFID in the context. ... Two tagging technologies are popularly used in industrial applications: barcodes. and RFID [19].
  11. Roadmap_Packaging 3

    https://www.ifm.eng.cam.ac.uk/uploads/Research/CTM/Roadmapping/packaging_roadmap.pdf
    13 Mar 2012: Innovation. RFID. On-pack electronics. Nanotechnology. Anti-counterfeit. Production Printing. Supply chain. Recycling. ... RFID. On-pack electronics. Nanotechnology. Anti-counterfeit. Production Printing. Supply chain. Recycling. Skills.
  12. Carbon Nanotube Conductive Additives for Improved Electrical and…

    www-mech.eng.cam.ac.uk/profiles/fleck/papers/334.pdf
    4 Sep 2018: devices, and RFIDs. Such devices require flexible batteries with electrodes that maintain their. ... identification (RFID) tags, as well as implantable biomedical devices [1]–[8]. As these devices.
  13. 181138-2015-11-02-v-rrd-Road4FAME-Inhalt.indd

    https://www.ifm.eng.cam.ac.uk/uploads/Road4FAME_roadmap.pdf
    25 Nov 2015: Integration of human worker in manufactur-ing process: Driven by the proliferation of mobile devices in the consumer sector, manu-facturing companies increasingly want to ap-ply mobile devices in a ... In the future, mobile devices will allow human
  14. A c4e preprint by the Computational Modelling Group

    https://como.ceb.cam.ac.uk/media/preprints/c4e-Preprint-174.pdf
    1 May 2019: IoT. They include wiredor wireless sensors, radio frequency identification (RFID) tags, input-output devices withinteractive functions such as displaying, editing, and analysing information, or as controldevices sending instructions or commands to
  15. WP316final

    https://www.jbs.cam.ac.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/cbrwp316.pdf
    9 Jul 2023: As is well known, the arrival of the Internet and the www, plus powerful personal computers, huge data banks and the embedding of smart chips and Radio Frequency Identification devices ( RfiD)
  16. CDBB_final_v2

    https://www.cdbb.cam.ac.uk/system/files/documents/CDBB_final_v2.pdf
    1 May 2018: physiological responses using EEG devices. Uniquely, Mozos et al. (2017) combined analysis with. ... including comparing online and offline (with RFID measurement devices) contact networks (e.g.
  17. Device Physics of Solution-Processed Organic Field-Effect Transistors

    https://www.me.phy.cam.ac.uk/system/files/documents/sirringhaus_adv_mat_2005.pdf
    and simple, low-cost, radiofrequency identification (RFID)tags[12] and sensing devices. Other applications, such as active-matrix liquid crystal or organic light-emitting diode (OLED)displays, or high-performance RFID ... He has been working in the field
  18. 2D Materials ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT • OPEN ACCESS Graphene-Black…

    www-g.eng.cam.ac.uk/nms/publications/pdf/509_Akhavan2023.pdf
    27 Mar 2023: Printing can be used for large-scale(>1m2)[74] fabri-cation of optoelectronic devices on both rigid[75] andflexible[76] substrates. ... A variety of printed devices havebeen reported[77], such as radio-frequency identification(RFID) tags on paper[78, 79],
  19. A Study of Bluetooth Low Energy Performance forHuman Proximity ...

    https://mobile-systems.cl.cam.ac.uk/papers/percom17.pdf
    11 Jan 2017: the first analysis of BLE capabilities and limitations oncommercial wearable devices (Android Wear and Tizen);. • ... This represents an improvement when compared tothe 20 seconds granularity of dedicated RFID devices [17] orto the few minutes of
  20. CAM-AUTOID-WH011

    https://www.ifm.eng.cam.ac.uk/uploads/Research/DIAL/Resources/White_papers/cam-autoid-wh011.pdf
    3 Apr 2012: However, in some applications it may be appropriate to use mobile, wireless sensors, which may well take the form of more sophisticated RFID devices. ... The nature of the RFID technology that underlies Auto-ID is in some senses probabalistic ratherthan
  21. Published June 1, 2003. Distribution restricted to Sponsors until ...

    https://www.ifm.eng.cam.ac.uk/uploads/Research/DIAL/Resources/White_papers/cam-autoid-wh018.pdf
    3 Apr 2012: The Auto-IDinfrastructure using current ‘off the shelf’ RFID technology was then effectively “bolted on to” the centralisedcontrol system. ... Integration of Auto-ID systems with network direct devices.– E-Manufacturing/co-ordinated

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