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HF RFID - The Great Leap Forward
IDTechEx, Feb 2008, Pages: 197

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EXECUTIVE SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS

1. INTRODUCTION
1.1. Many frequencies will always be needed
1.2. Why HF is the favourite RFID frequency
1.2.1. HF compared
1.2.2. The myth of the one meter limit to HF range
1.2.3. Fractal antennas
1.2.4. HF promoted for difficult environments
1.2.5. Swept HF
1.3. How UHF has sometimes been oversold
1.4. Significance of printing chipless HF RFID
1.4.2. Printing components on top of each other
1.4.3. How transistors are designed
1.4.4. State of play with frequency performance and the markets opening up
1.4.5. New vertical geometry - VFETs
1.4.6. Organic printed transistors in action - PolyIC
1.4.7. Inorganic compound semiconductors for transistors

2. HF RFID ENABLED PHONES VS HF CONTACTLESS SMART CARDS 2008-2018
2.1. Comparison of NFC and RFID enabled phones
2.2. RFID enabled phones etc
2.2.1. Why have NFC?
2.2.2. Near Field Communications and RFID enabled phones
2.2.3. Massive success in Japan, haggling and delayed rollout elsewhere
2.2.4. Unlimited options for value added services
2.2.5. The telcos are winning
2.2.6. Where in the phone?
2.2.7. The (never ending) trials
2.2.8. Consumer response - say one thing, do another?
2.2.9. Examples of trials of NFC phones
2.2.10. Working groups
2.3. Contactless cards and tickets
2.3.1. Sales projections for HF RFID cards
2.3.2. Sales projections for contactless tickets
2.3.3. Further growth in spending
2.3.4. Financial cards are a major new market
2.3.5. How China became the world's largest market for contactless cards and tickets
2.3.6. Sticking cards on phones
2.3.7. Future card functionality
2.4. Will one option win?
2.4.1. Watch Japan
2.4.2. Companies that benefit
2.4.3. League table of largest RFID companies

3. KOVIO - PRINTED HF TRANSISTORS AT ONE TENTH THE COST OF THE SILICON CHIP
3.1. Exceptionally high mobility
3.2. Sharply reduced capital and process costs
3.3. Background to the standards breakthrough
3.4. Standards beyond ISO 14443
3.5. Product strategy of Kovio
3.6. Kovio rollout
3.7. Details of Kovio
3.8. Examples of Kovio patents

4. CAMBRIDGE RESONANT TECHNOLOGIES - ONE TENTH OF THE POWER AND MANY OTHER ADVANCES
4.1. Background
4.1.2. Detuning
4.1.3. Communication rate
4.2. OnTuneTM
4.3. Implementation
4.4. Benefits
4.4.2. Application in Readers
4.4.3. Application in tags
4.5. Cost
4.6. New tag types
4.7. Availability
4.8. Details of Cambridge Resonant Technologies

5. DAG SYSTEM - SEVERAL METERS RANGE NOW POSSIBLE AT HF
5.1. Reading difficult obscured cases in pallet loads
5.2. Company description
5.3. All RFID Store
5.4. Race timing

6. MAGELLAN TECHNOLOGY - TEN TIMES BETTER HF MULTITAG READING AND OTHER BENEFITS
6.1. Overview
6.2. The technology
6.3. Applications
6.3.1. Casino Gaming
6.3.2. Document Management
6.3.3. Medical Implant tracking
6.3.4. Pharmaceuticals
6.4. Details of Magellan

7. OTHER EXCITING NEW ADVANCES IN HF RFID
7.1. Truly nano silver ink HF antennas - NanoMas Technologies
7.2. Additive Process Technologies - electroplating HF antennas on paper
7.3. Leonhard Kurz - high quality, low cost HF antennas
7.4. Sirit Plug-n-Play
7.5. Tagsys HF advances in 2007/8
7.6. HF Generation 2 EPC Specification
7.7. Texas Instruments High Security Multifunctional HF chips
7.8. Pliant and PowerID
7.9. Supertec smart shelves and kiosks

8. USING THE HF BREAKTHROUGHS TOGETHER

9. NEAR FIELD UHF VS HF FOR ITEM LEVEL TAGGING - THE BIGGEST POTENTIAL RFID MARKET
9.1. Needs of item level RFID
9.2. HF is long established for item level
9.3. Enter NF UHF
9.4. TFTCs not yet available and not necessarily as good
9.5. The-Package-Is-The-Tag™
9.6. HF in retailing
9.7. UHF patents hurdles - Intermec, Via Licensing
9.8. UHF regulations vary greatly
9.9. The battle to make UHF usable worldwide is far from over
9.10. Avoiding confusion between small items
9.11. HF extends its reach
9.12. Failing to learn from history - the anti-theft tag fiasco repeated with drug RFID?
9.13. Playing catch up with HF specifications
9.14. Strong marketing of UHF - and some balancing comments
9.15. Conclusions

APPENDIX 1: STANDARDS
APPENDIX 2: IDTECHEX PUBLICATIONS
APPENDIX 3: GLOSSARY

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