Recent development has made it possible to operate 8 individual antenna's from one single Stentor 416 RFID reader.
In the past years, the Stentor reader has mainly been used to drive large antenna arrays where several streams of transponders in a high density could be monitored reliably, even without using an anti-collision protocoll. With an 8 meter antenna, detection rates of more than 5000 transponders per minute can easily be achieved. The principle is based on one or two large transmit antennae, enclosing a row of separate receive antennae.
The 'Solar System' configurations operates differently. Up to 8 separate antennae, each consisting of one transmit loop and one or two receive loops can be connected to one Stentor 416 reader. The system has been successfully tested with connecting cables of 10 meters. This means, that 8 separate RFID tasks taking place within a twenty-meter sphere can all be performed by one Stentor.
After a thorough 'revitalisation' the Groninger Museum opened its doors for the public on 18 december 2010.
One of the innovative new ideas is the GM-collector. Each visitor is given an RFID transponder instead of an ordinary entrance ticket. The transponder is registered with the visitor's email address. By holding the transponder near a GM-collector (actually a muReader) next to a work of art, the visitor expresses interest in the particular piece. After the museum visit, the visitor receives additional information via Internet about the works he has shown interest in.
Are you organising a conference where you need to track the attendance in several parallel sessions? Forget all previous registration systems. This s new, simple and effective.