Seattle company Impinj has acquired Intel's RFID business under undisclosed terms, the companies said on Thursday.
Impinj expects that the deal will allow it to address a broader market, namely that of handheld, mobile RFID (radio frequency identification) readers. That's because the company will be able to sell chips that include most of the functionality required for a reader radio, allowing developers to build small form-factor devices.
Intel's RFID business, part of its New Business Initiatives Incubator, developed the R1000 RFID reader chip. The chip has been used in a variety of form factors and different markets such as supply chain management, asset tracking and authentication.
The deal was an all stock transaction and Intel gets an observer seat on Impinj's board. Impinj expects to take on fewer than 10 Intel employees as part of the acquisition.
Impinj recently announced that Metro Group, a European grocery store chain, has begun using its RFID products in the butcher section of one of its stores. Metro adds an RFID tag to each meat package on the shelf. RFID readers continually monitor the tags for the "best before" date and send alerts to store workers to remove items before they reach the date. Check out systems also have readers that alert clerks when customers are trying to buy out-of-date products.
The demand for integrated RFID chips like the one Intel developed is growing as the RFID market matures, said Michael Liard, an analyst at ABI Research, in a research note on Thursday. This year, large organizations including Airbus, Sam's Club and the U.S. Department of Defense have all announced new RFID projects, according to ABI. The RFID market is expected to generate US$9.7 billion by 2013, ABI said.
- Sponsored Resource:Are you ready for virtualization? Try the sever assessment tool.
- Sponsored Resource:Learn more about ultra light notebooks from Asus and the best warranty in the industry.
- Sponsored Resource:Thinking about a new Laptop? Lenovo has models to meet everyone's needs.
- Sponsored Resource:Get the truth about remanufactured ink. Learn more from HP.
- Sponsored Resource:Six smart ways to grow small business IT
News For Your Business
- Wi-Fi In-flight Comes to Some American Routes
- Free Wi-Fi: How Can it Pay off for Businesses?
- Wi-Fi Tweaks for Speed Freaks
- Malaysia's Packet One Launches WiMax Service
- Intel Plans to Support 2.3GHz, 3.5GHz WiMax Next Year







Community Comments