The Movement To Put An RFID Chip Into Every Living Person

Movement To Put An RFID Chip Into Every Living Person Also visit our ministry at: amedeoministries.weebly.com
Video Rating: 3 / 5

Incoming search terms:

  • idchamp nfc
  • can nfc reader scan rfid tag
  • idchamp rfid
Read More

iPad & iPhone NFC reader scans RFID tag data into any website

Looking for the best NFC RFID reader/scanner for iPad? This video demonstrates using a 13.56MHz, high frequency RFID reader called the IDChamp and a WiSnap AAA WiFi Dongle from Serialio.com read/scan high frequencyRFID tags, also known as Near-Field-Communication (NFC) tags, into the iPad. The WiSnap has been connected to the same enterprise network that the iPad is, so all we have to do is launch the List-In-Hand® Mobile List app which gives us connectivity to the WiSnap, and the settings are done here to tell Mobile List the wifi RS-232 device connected it a WiSnap RS-232 to Wi-Fi converter with the IDChamp RFID reader on the other end. You simply hit connect and the WiSnap connects to the iPad. Now that the two are connected, the Mobile List app allows scanning information and posting directly a web page as if the data was typed by simply moving the NFC tag near the RFID reader. Simply hold the tag on the reader and you can get the RFID tag data read into the web page. But you don’t want to use Restock.com you say, so you can use the Go to page feature and go to another website. When you’re on the other website, the Mobile List app gives you the same functionality, you can simply scan and the information is put on the website. Here it’s a bit meaningless because Yahoo! doesn’t know anything about these tags, but you can point this to your own website with your own database that knows about these tags and simply scan the tags and up comes the information. For more
Video Rating: 5 / 5

Incoming search terms:

  • RFID for iPad
  • scan a chip with an ipad
  • scan chip with ipad
  • scanchip iphone
Read More

Putting the FUN into RFID from Facebook and Coca-Cola

These are the first steps to warm the public to RFID Chips. Publicis E-dologic figured out a way to embed user data in IDF bracelets, and thus allow people to “Like” real world objects, places and events spreading the word about it on their facebook accounts. They implemented these facebook-bracelets at the Coca Cola Village, a watersport, sunbathing, gameplaying amusement park activity-thing for teenagers. When the guests arrive, they are given a ‏ bracelet ID which transmits an RFID signal, which they program with their facebook login. They can then “like” activities and places in the real village, and their actions show up on facebook. Teenagers are driven by vanity like everyone else, so there was a photographer present as well, if you wanted to tag yourself in any given image all you had to do was wave your ID bracelet to the photographer. This will ultimately lead to the public getting permanent chips. Privacy advocates have protested the VeriChip, warning of potential abuse and denouncing these types of RFID devices as “spychips,” and that use by governments could allow the tracking of citizens, increasing any moves towards a police state. In addition, privacy advocates state that the information contained in this chip could easily be stolen, so that storing anything private in it would be to risk identity theft. According to Wired News online, and the Associated Press, there have been research articles over the last ten years that found a connection between the
Video Rating: 0 / 5

RFID: Tracking Everything Part 1 With Katherine Albrecht

Read More