AT&T gets into the kid-tracking game
By Evan Blass | December 12, 2007
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets, Wireless, Networking
While it probably won’t be peddling this new tech in California, there’s still a whole world of youngsters out there for AT&T to track with its new RFID- and GPS-based mobile resource management systems, which the company has designed specifically with school districts in mind. The so-called MRM platform allows administrators to follow Junior’s progress from the minute he steps on the bus in the morning, thanks to GPS-equipped transmitters that log location, speed, and condition and can even “report on events within vehicles.” Once he gets to class, the school’s WiFi backbone can pinpoint him anywhere on campus courtesy of that mandatory RFID badge he’s wearing, which AT&T touts as an efficient solution for daily attendance tracking. That is, until teachers start relying on this system without question, and classes eventually thin out to one student in the back row with a pocket full of cash and a backpack full of IDs.
Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments
Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!
Topics: Gadgets |
« USB missile launcher goes wireless | Main | PlayStation emulation coming to iPhone via psx4iphone »
Comments
Similar Posts
- Hands-on with the CES 2008 RFID badge
This week’s overblown privacy scare, courtesy of RFID tires
PodCamp West
RFID deadbolt system also features remote browser control
Hold The Future With An Online MBA Degree Program
Montclair State mandates use of GPS-enabled phones
Improve Your Future Through a College Degree Online
ET wearable RFID gear turns everything into toys
Pretec unveils waterproof i-Disk RFID flash drive
Home Maintenance Software
Japanese government to track kids via mobile handsets
Hitachi Shows World’s Smallest RFID Chip
Scots lose sight of early release offenders due to faulty electronic tags
College Degree Online
Apple RFID networking in the works
Distant Education Programs Rise in Popularity on the Web
Rising Popularity of Distant Learning Programs
LinkedIn Answers : Love Child of LinkedIn & Yahoo Answers
Increasing Popularity of Distance Educational Universities
NEC’s VT700 projector excites kids, bores teachers
















