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  2. 1-CAM-AUTOID-WH014 -V2

    https://www.ifm.eng.cam.ac.uk/uploads/Research/DIAL/Resources/White_papers/cam-autoid-wh-014.pdf
    3 Apr 2012: Finkenzeller [Finkenzeller2000] gives a more in-depth classification of RFID systems. The case studiesdescribed in this paper use low cost, passive RFID tags operating at 13.56 MHz that only store ... Vogt2002] 14. H. Vogt, “Efficient object
  3. 3-CAM-AUTOID-WH016-V2

    https://www.ifm.eng.cam.ac.uk/uploads/Research/DIAL/Resources/White_papers/cam-autoid-wh024.pdf
    28 Mar 2012: 1. Passive tag RFID systems require no power source at the tag – there is no battery. ... Passive tag RFID systems are the most common type, and are often referred to simply as ‘RFID systems’.
  4. CAM-AUTOID-WH007 3

    https://www.ifm.eng.cam.ac.uk/uploads/Research/DIAL/Resources/White_papers/cam-autoid-wh-007.pdf
    3 Apr 2012: Such RFID tags are passive (i.e. require no on-board battery) and can typically be read from a distance ranging from a few centimetres to a few metres. ... This is exactly the approach taken in the design of semi-passive RFID tags – the communication
  5. 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].

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