It’ll be harder to lose things once containers learn to keep track of their contents. That’s the idea behind Tool Link, a product created by Cambridge-based company ThingMagic, working with Ford and toolmaker DeWalt. Tool Link, which will be installed in 2009 Ford Work Solutions E-series and F-series vehicles, can take inventory of the tools packed in a truck using radio-frequency identification (RFID) and alert the user if any are missing.
ThingMagic cofounders Yael Maguire and Ravi Pappu say that they created the product in response to demand from the construction industry, where lost or forgotten tools cost companies time and money. Using RFID to solve the problem stemmed naturally from the company’s larger philosophy of connecting the physical objects in the world to Internet technologies. “RFID is suited to enable search in the reality around us,” says Pappu. He and Maguire say they’re working to build the infrastructure that can enable their vision of pervasive RFID.
Tool Link’s core technology is an RFID reader built into the truck bed that reads microchips on the tools to sense which ones the bed contains. Each microchip, or RFID tag, is fitted with an antenna so that data can be sent between the reader and the tag. In this case, the reader might request the number of the tool from each tag contained in the truck bed. The RFID reader provides all the power in the transaction, meaning that the tags on the tools don’t need any sort of battery supply. Similar RFID systems are used by many large companies for inventory purposes. What makes Tool Link unique is the application and ThingMagic’s focus on embedding RFID into the object. The antennas, for example, are manufactured to look like the rest of the truck bed so that they can blend in seamlessly. In the future, Maguire says, the truck bed itself might be the antenna.
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