the.com/rfid
a tiny chip that shouts its name at anyone with the right antenna.
means a wireless system that uses radio waves to identify and track tags attached to objects, no line-of-sight or battery required for most versions.
from grew out of WWII 'identify friend or foe' radar transponders on aircraft, then got shrunk and civilianized through the 1970s and 80s for tracking livestock, railcars, and eventually everything else.
first patent1973, mario cardullo, a passive transponder
power sourcepassive tags harvest energy from the reader's signal
rangefrom a few centimeters to over 100 meters
walmart mandate2003 supplier push made rfid a retail standard