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词汇 smart tag
释义

Definition of smart tag in English:

smart tag

noun
  • An electronic tag with an embedded RFID device, attached to an object for the purposes of tracking or storing data relating to its use.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • In June, the retailer asked its top 100 suppliers to start using smart tags by 2005.
    • RFID uses low-powered radio transmitters to read data stored in smart tags embedded with tiny chips and antennas.
    • If this sounds rather far-fetched - a combination of 1984 and Minority Report - then let me tell you about a new generation of "smart tags" that is about to hit the British high street.
    • And unlike barcodes, which merely identify a product line, smart tags are specific to an individual item such as a can of Coke, and can convey detailed information about its manufacturing history and sell-by date.
    • Stock in the store has been equipped with radio frequency identification (RFID) or 'smart tags' - microchips containing information about the products.
    • On Oct. 2, the Defense Dept. told its 43,000 suppliers that by 2005 it will require them to use radio frequency IDs, or "smart tags," which are the successor to bar codes.
    • Each will have a different impact - from smart tags that will allow products to be tracked through the distribution network to bio-simulation software that is speeding the path of safer, more effective new drugs to pharmacy shelves.
    • If smart tags are operating solely as part of a trust relationship between customer and supplier, then that's largely up to the pair of them.
    • There is a revolution in supply chain management in the private sector: smart tags, real-time links from inventory to production and anticipatory restocking.
    • Smart tags are also being affixed to refrigerated containers to make sure that food is stored at the right temperature.
    • The promise of smart tags is that they could serve as an advanced version of the omnipresent UPC bar code, providing information about not just what a product is, but also where it is, where it has been, and how it has been handled.
    • Twenty years after barcodes took over, the smart tag is on the edge of a far more pervasive revolution.
    • A smart-tag reader in a warehouse, truck, or store can "query" all of the smart tags in its vicinity, taking inventory without human help.
    • The technology relies on "smart tags" being fitted to individual items, from cereals to CDs, as a cost-effective way of monitoring product lines and automating the reordering process.
    • For example, the UPS smart tag will let users click on a package's tracking number found in an e-mail or document and link to information on the parcel's whereabouts.
    • The battery-operated smart tags rely on cellphone technology to send information back to MIT computers, allowing researchers - and the public - to monitor the trash in real-time as it moves through the waste stream to its final destination.
    • The use of RFID (radio frequency identification), also called "smart tags", is on the rise in the retail industry.
    • Smart tags, by comparison, must be separately affixed, at this point, with some type of adhesive.
    • The Smart Tag is already widely used by the British Army and many emergency services in this country.

Definition of smart tag in US English:

smart tag

noun
  • An electronic tag with an embedded RFID device, attached to an object for the purposes of tracking or storing data relating to its use.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Twenty years after barcodes took over, the smart tag is on the edge of a far more pervasive revolution.
    • For example, the UPS smart tag will let users click on a package's tracking number found in an e-mail or document and link to information on the parcel's whereabouts.
    • RFID uses low-powered radio transmitters to read data stored in smart tags embedded with tiny chips and antennas.
    • If this sounds rather far-fetched - a combination of 1984 and Minority Report - then let me tell you about a new generation of "smart tags" that is about to hit the British high street.
    • The technology relies on "smart tags" being fitted to individual items, from cereals to CDs, as a cost-effective way of monitoring product lines and automating the reordering process.
    • Stock in the store has been equipped with radio frequency identification (RFID) or 'smart tags' - microchips containing information about the products.
    • The battery-operated smart tags rely on cellphone technology to send information back to MIT computers, allowing researchers - and the public - to monitor the trash in real-time as it moves through the waste stream to its final destination.
    • Smart tags are also being affixed to refrigerated containers to make sure that food is stored at the right temperature.
    • The Smart Tag is already widely used by the British Army and many emergency services in this country.
    • If smart tags are operating solely as part of a trust relationship between customer and supplier, then that's largely up to the pair of them.
    • In June, the retailer asked its top 100 suppliers to start using smart tags by 2005.
    • Smart tags, by comparison, must be separately affixed, at this point, with some type of adhesive.
    • A smart-tag reader in a warehouse, truck, or store can "query" all of the smart tags in its vicinity, taking inventory without human help.
    • On Oct. 2, the Defense Dept. told its 43,000 suppliers that by 2005 it will require them to use radio frequency IDs, or "smart tags," which are the successor to bar codes.
    • There is a revolution in supply chain management in the private sector: smart tags, real-time links from inventory to production and anticipatory restocking.
    • The promise of smart tags is that they could serve as an advanced version of the omnipresent UPC bar code, providing information about not just what a product is, but also where it is, where it has been, and how it has been handled.
    • Each will have a different impact - from smart tags that will allow products to be tracked through the distribution network to bio-simulation software that is speeding the path of safer, more effective new drugs to pharmacy shelves.
    • The use of RFID (radio frequency identification), also called "smart tags", is on the rise in the retail industry.
    • And unlike barcodes, which merely identify a product line, smart tags are specific to an individual item such as a can of Coke, and can convey detailed information about its manufacturing history and sell-by date.
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