Sentences with phrase «frequency identification chips»

They pick up data from radio - frequency identification chips embedded in your credit cards or cell phone to retrieve details about you and your spending habits and serve up an advertisement just for you.
RFID or radio frequency identification chips are installed in all new passports.
More than 2,000 people have radio frequency identification chips, or RFID tags, inserted under their skin.
To find out if the cockroaches had personalities, Planas - Sitjà and his colleagues glued tiny radio frequency identification chips to the thoraxes of 304 roaches so that they could track each insect after it was placed in a new environment.
When scanned by a compatible reader, the radio - frequency identification chip emits your pet unique identification number.

Not exact matches

Finally, with radio frequency identification (RFID) chips embedded in parts, software can be used to manage supply chains.
Tinier than a single grain of rice (2 mm x 12 mm) and encased in a glass cylinder, the radio frequency identification - enabled (RFID) chips are a bit like the implants pet owners have veterinarians insert into their furry friends to follow their whereabouts.
Lead researcher, JCU's Dr Lori Lach, said the team glued Radio - Frequency Identification (RFID) chips to the backs of 960 bees, providing new insights into how disease affects the threatened insects.
The organic chips, commonly inserted under the skin of cats and dogs in lieu of identification collars, can be made cheaply but can only process low - frequency radio waves, giving them distance limitations.
They volunteered to have radio frequency identification (RFID) chips implanted in their hands.
IN THIS engaging documentary, we follow Mark Stepanek as he deliberates whether or not to get a radio frequency identification, or RFID, chip implanted in his hand.
One idea is to use radio - frequency identification (RFID) technology — labelling things with small chips that store data and can be tracked.
They have volunteered to have radio frequency identification (RFID) chips implanted into their hands — in the skin between the forefinger and thumb.
The wheels are serialized and each one has a radio frequency identification (RFID) chip embedded into it to track it through its useful life.
This is a permanent radio - frequency identification (RFID) chip implanted under the dog's skin and read by a chip scanner or wand.
The chip identification number is stored in a tiny transponder that can be read through the dog's skin by a scanner emitting low - frequency radio waves.
The chip, about the size of a large grain of rice, uses passive RFID (Radio Frequency Identification) technology to transmit a unique number that can be picked up by a scanner.
The passport card contains a radio frequency identification, or RFID, chip that allows border inspectors to access photographs and biographical information stored in secure government databases as the traveler passed through an inspection station.
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