Today's companies are constantly looking for ways to improve employee productivity. For any car, fuel consumption is a cost to the company. Without accurate, real-time data, it is difficult to determine where you can improve and to ensure that there are no tools needed to make the most of the resources to operate the fleet. Different types of GPS tracking and management systems provide the necessary tools to make positive changes based on accurate and up-to-date information.
RFID (Radio Frequency Identification) technology is considered to be one of the most permanent computing techniques in history. The concept of RFID is not up-to-date, but it was born out of military applications when the British Air Force used RFID technology to combine enemy aircraft and aircraft via radar during the Second World War (Asif and Mandviwalla, 2005). RFID tags have a wide range of design and have several unusual useful features such as power, carrier frequency, read range, data storage capacity, memory type, size, lifetime and cost. They may be either merely read or read / write capability, active, passive or semi-passive, depending on the mode in which they drive the operating power and send the data to the reader. Active tags have a compact, deep-rooted battery that draws power from there, enabling better coverage, higher data transfer rates, and greater data storage than inert tags.
As we know today, Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) tags are one of the major changes in (probably) supply chain transparency. In the Harvard Business Review 2010 article in 2010, it was explained that RFID tag technology is open to the public, that it can label the product or the product in detail, and can improve traceability and visibility throughout the product lifecycle . With RFID technology, you can track chickens in the comfortable environment of the head office around the world (new features in 2010).