Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Books | 621.384192 FRI (Browse shelf) | Available | 034387 |
621.38418 SHA Design and implementation of low-power CMOS radio receivers | 621.384191 FER GNSS software receivers | 621.384191 SKL Modern HF signal detection and direction-finding | 621.384192 FRI Billion little pieces : RFID and infrastructures of identification | 621.384192 PRA Design and construction of an RFID-enabled infrastructure : the next avatar of the Internet | 621.38438 PUP Wireless Communications : 2007 CNIT Thyrrenian Symposium | 621.3845 AKA Introduction to digital mobile communication |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
RFID (radio frequency identification) has been deployed in the billions to track objects through the global economy and is used to manage and monitor public transportation systems, store identifying information in biometric passports, communicate sensor information about infrastructure and food safety, power contactless "smart" cards, and provide essential identification functions for the growing Internet of Things. RFID tags can be as small as a grain of rice and sown into clothing or embedded in packaging--even inside animal and human bodies. They are found in credit cards, key fobs, car windshields, your T pass, consumer electronics, the walls of tunnels--and yet, most people are unaware of their presence.
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