EPCglobal Announces Formation of New Standards Work Group to Study High Frequency Technologies to Support Broad Industry Adoption of RFID; Expansion into High Frequency Sought By Healthcare Industry: HF and UHF Gen 2 Working Groups Formed.BRUSSELS, Belgium -- EPCglobal Inc(TM), a subsidiary of GS1 and a not-for-profit Not-for-profit An organization established for charitable, humanitarian, or educational purposes that is exempt from some taxes and in which no one in profits or losses. standards organization A standards organization, also sometimes referred to as a standards body, a standards development organization or SDO (depending on what is being referenced), is any entity whose primary activities are developing, coordinating, promulgating, revising, amending, entrusted with driving global adoption of Electronic Product Code (EPC (1) (Entertainment PC) See HTPC. (2) (Electronic Product Code) A standard code for RFID tags administered by EPCglobal Inc. (www.epcglobalinc.org). ) technology, today announced the formation of two new standards development working groups, with one focused on creating an EPCglobal Generation 2 standard for high frequency (HF) bands for healthcare applications. The two new working groups being formed are the HF Air Interface Working Group and the UHF (Ultra High Frequency) The range of electromagnetic frequencies from 300 MHz to 3 GHz. In the U.S., analog television has used UHF channels 52 to 69 in the 700 MHz band. Air Interface Working Group. The HF Working Group will focus on extending the logic and technology that is part of today's UHF Gen 2 standard into the high frequency band. The UHF Working Group will be looking at developing extensions to the current Gen 2 UHF protocol to add security features that are needed for item level tagging. Both working groups will be operating in the context of the requirements and scenarios developed by the item level tagging joint requirements group. "EPCglobal is happy to begin work on extending the very successful EPCglobal Gen 2 standard to support the healthcare industry," said Chris Adcock, president of EPCglobal. "EPCglobal is technology and frequency neutral. Our main objective is to ensure that we have common data structures and command sets to make it easier and less costly to implement." Today's announcement follows successful work that has been undertaken by the EPCglobal Healthcare and Life Sciences Business Action Group (HLS (Hue Lightness Saturation) A color space that is closely related to HSB, except that Brightness is called Lightness and is measured from 0 to 1 rather than from 0 to 100%. See HSB. BAG). "Our focus has always been on the needs of end users and helping them make business processes better, faster, less expensive and more secure using EPC," said Mike Rose, Vice President of RFID/EPC, Johnson & Johnson. Rose is co-chair of the HLS BAG and a member of the EPCglobal Board of Governors. "High frequency performs well in certain pharmaceutical applications so it makes sense to extend the global reach of Gen 2 to HF." Last month EPCglobal hosted a technology demonstration for a broad cross-section of end users and technology providers from retail, healthcare and other industries to review a variety of RFID (Radio Frequency IDentification) A data collection technology that uses electronic tags for storing data. The tag, also known as an "electronic label," "transponder" or "code plate," is made up of an RFID chip attached to an antenna. technologies and how they perform in an item-level tagging environment. The event included 56 demonstrations and 23 hardware vendors using a range of frequencies and technologies in response to user driven requirements. The demonstration revealed that many different technologies and frequencies have the potential to be used for item-level tagging. "The EPCglobal UHF Gen 2 standard is our clear choice as we continue to roll out RFID in our supply chain," said Wal-Mart Chief Information Officer Rollin Ford. "UHF is the best technology for Wal-Mart at this time. Obviously using one standard will deliver the lowest cost solution for all industries; however if the technical performance and economics support the HF frequency for other industries, then we would support the extension of the EPCglobal Gen 2 standard and data structure to HF for those industries." "The adoption of RFID in the supply chain is of critical importance to us all," said Dick Cantwell, Founding Chairman of the EPCglobal Board of Governors. "And that adoption is equally important across retail, healthcare, aerospace, logistics, apparel and other industries." The EPCglobal UHF Generation 2 protocol, a consensus standard built by more than 60 of the world's leading technology companies, describes the core capabilities required to meet the performance needs set by the end-user community. The UHF Gen 2 standard is used as a base platform upon which many standards-based products are built today. Since its initial ratification The confirmation or adoption of an act that has already been performed. A principal can, for example, ratify something that has been done on his or her behalf by another individual who assumed the authority to act in the capacity of an agent. in December 2004, the EPCglobal Gen 2 standard has proven to be the cornerstone cornerstone Ceremonial building block, dated or otherwise inscribed, usually placed in an outer wall of a building to commemorate its dedication. Often the stone is hollowed out to contain newspapers, photographs, or other documents reflecting current customs, with a view to of technology development. It has spurred development of a host of Generation 2 hardware products. An EPCglobal standard ensures interoperability The capability of two or more hardware devices or two or more software routines to work harmoniously together. For example, in an Ethernet network, display adapters, hubs, switches and routers from different vendors must conform to the Ethernet standard and interoperate with each other. and sets minimum operational expectations for various components in the EPCglobal Network(TM), including hardware components. While EPCglobal oversees interoperability and conformance testing Conformance testing or type testing is testing to determine whether a system meets some specified standard. To aid in this, many test procedures and test setups have been developed, either by the standard's maintainers or external organizations, specifically for of standards-based products, the actual development of these products comes from leading solution providers around the globe. About EPCglobal Inc. EPCglobal Inc(TM), a subsidiary of GS1, is a not-for-profit organization entrusted by industry to establish and support the EPCglobal Network(R) as the global standard for real-time, automatic identification of information in the supply chain of any company, anywhere in the world. The EPCglobal Network combines Radio Frequency Identification See RFID. (RFID) technology, existing communications network The transmission channels interconnecting all client and server stations as well as all supporting hardware and software. infrastructure, and the Electronic Product Code(TM) (a number for uniquely identifying an item) to enable accurate, cost-efficient visibility of information in the supply chain. The end result helps organizations be more efficient, flexible, and responsive to customer needs. EPCglobal US(TM) is an affiliate of EPCglobal Inc, serving subscribers in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. to help foster the adoption of the EPCglobal Network and related technology. For more information about EPCglobal visit: www.EPCglobalinc.org. |
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