Awarepoint Corporation has been granted U.S. Patent No. 7,324,824. The patent covers Awarepoint’s mesh network plug-in sensor appliance and describes the use of a plug-in network appliance to perform a bridge between two wireless communication formats and perform position location services.
“This patented sensor is a small, unobtrusive device that plugs directly into AC outlets forming an automatic mesh sensor network. It requires no cabling, and it can be moved to other AC outlets as needed to optimize the system’s performance,” said Ron Hegli, Chief Technology Officer of Awarepoint.
This sensor is designed uniquely to perform two key functions: observe radio communications from tags, and route observation data to a central server. The sensors employ a networking standard called ZigBee to automatically form an ad-hoc, mesh data network that allows tag observations to be routed through multiple sensor/routers to a coordinating bridge node and ultimately to their final destination at a server. The ability of the sensors to observe tags and create observation data that allows tag positions to be accurately calculated, the ability to wirelessly communicate the observation data to the central server, and the plug-in form factor described makes the Awarepoint sensor network deployment fast and low-impact.
At the International Solid State Circuit Conference, Holst Centre, IMEC and the Dutch research center TNO - presented a plastic 64-bit inductively-coupled passive RFID tag operating at 13.56MHz. With a record 780bit/s data readout of 64 bits over 10cm, the device approaches item-level tagging requirements. The tag generates a 5-fold higher bit rate compared to state-of-the-art plastic RFID systems. The achievement paves the way for low-cost high-volume RFID tags to replace barcodes.