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By Alorie Gilbert
Posted on ZDNet News: Nov 7, 2003 10:41:00 PM

Wal-Mart plans to spend $3 billion over the next several years on a new inventory tracking technology that uses radio frequency signals to keep tabs on merchandise, sources familiar with the project said.

The system is based on a technology known as radio frequency identification (RFID), a new breed of computer network designed to track the location of everyday objects such as razors and shoes by embedding them with special microchips. Wal-Mart has enlisted its top 100 merchandise suppliers to participate in the high-profile project, one of the first and largest of its kind in the retail industry.

A Wal-Mart representative refused to comment on the company's spending plans.

Wal-Mart's multibillion budget is an unofficial estimate that the company has discussed privately with other companies involved in the project, said the sources, who wished to remain anonymous.

Nevertheless, the large sum bodes well for a number of information technology companies that specialize in the fledgling RFID niche. Among them are companies that make RFID chips and readers, including Philips Semiconductors and start-ups Alien Technology and Matrics. According to one source, Wal-Mart will spend about two-thirds of its RFID budget on readers and the installation of them in more than 100 distribution centers and thousands of stores.

The rest of the budget is slated for other hardware and software to collect, process and store data the new system generates, the source said. Several major tech companies, including Sun Microsystems, SAP, IBM and Intel, are developing such infrastructures and are lining up to sign on customers.

Wal-Mart and its top 120 or so merchandise suppliers met near the retailer's Bentonville, Ark., headquarters Tuesday to coordinate the U.S. launch of the technology, set to begin in 2005.

The project's success depends on the cooperation of Wal-Mart's suppliers. The retailer has asked them to purchase millions of RFID tags and attach them to all shipments headed for Wal-Mart warehouses. Analysts estimate that it will cost larger suppliers as much as $23 million just to start.

Wal-Mart expects a big payoff from the technology, mainly from having fewer logistical errors and reduced labor costs related to inventory processing. One analyst pegged the savings at nearly $8.4 billion annually, once Wal-Mart completes the project.

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  • Most Recent of 23 Talkback(s)
Yet another reason not to do buisness with Wally World!
Treatment of employees!

Facist attitudes in general!

Destruction of the Mom and Pop stores that added a richness to our society and culture.

Those Damn commercials....

Now using chips to lay open a clear path to Big Brother.

Rev jim... (Read the rest)
Posted by: Laff Posted on: 11/10/03 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Thanks for the warning.  Vily Clay | 11/07/03
This will only be shipping containers to start with.  DonnieBoy | 11/08/03
Gonna be too late?  Vily Clay | 11/08/03
We are talking technology here  DonnieBoy | 11/09/03
Get an idea ...  Vily Clay | 11/09/03
Oh, you can believe everything you see in movies?  DonnieBoy | 11/09/03
If you did not get it ? maybe the movie may help you ...  Vily Clay | 11/10/03
hmmm  lmaxwell | 11/10/03
I already don't shop there because they are fascists  HypnoToad | 11/07/03
Cameras  Additude | 11/08/03
The beginning ...  Vily Clay | 11/08/03
cash  lmaxwell | 11/10/03
(NT) Next up at W-M: Product Activation for merchandise :o)  Jack-Booted EULA | 11/10/03
The Wal-Mart 'family' ready for divorce.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 11/08/03
At the companies that do not adapt to new technology,  DonnieBoy | 11/08/03
Depends on the technology in question.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 11/08/03
Oh, people will rush to pay higher prices?  DonnieBoy | 11/09/03
And how hard would it be...  Jack-Booted EULA | 11/10/03
Hypno-Toad's Excellent Walmart Adventure  pogo13 | 11/08/03
Ohh, not tracking tech on illegal workers  FilledOut | 11/09/03
Re : Ohh, not tracking tech on illegal workers  lmaxwell | 11/10/03
it is not like  lmaxwell | 11/10/03
Yet another reason not to do buisness with Wally World!  Laff | 11/10/03

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