News
Sun's New RFID Software Allows Edge Devices to Process Info
- By John K. Waters
- June 29, 2005
The RFID revolution may have a price: network data overload. As radio frequency
identification technologies proliferate, the torrent of information generated
by the world's burgeoning bevy of RFID tags threatens to clog the corporate
net.
One solution, says Vijay Sarathy, marketing manager in Sun Microsystems' RFID
group, is to move some of the data processing to the RFID readers.
"The idea is to allow Java technology-enabled RFID devices to intelligently
process and filter the data they collect, instead of relying on external middleware,"
Sarathy tells AppTrends. "Our approach takes advantage of the capabilities
of Java to shield the network from the potential data avalanche generated by
large-scale RFID deployments."
Sun is adding this edge-of-the-network data processing capability to its RFID
software. Called the Sun Java System RFID Software for Java technology-enabled
RFID devices, it extends Java System RFID Software 2.0 with a distributed architecture
that allows RFID data processing to be performed where it makes the most sense,
Sarathy explains. "Sometimes it's at the device level, sometimes it's at
the enterprise level, and sometimes it's in between," he says.
The new version extends Sun’s Standard Edition and Micro Edition, and
supports EPCglobal application level events specifications for intelligent data
processing and filtering. It can also integrate with the enterprise version
of the Sun Java System RFID Software to provide centralized monitoring and management
of large numbers of distributed devices.
Sun has made a big commitment to RFID, a radio frequency-based method of storing
and retrieving data using small objects called tags. Sun rolled out its first
RFID software product in mid-2003. A year later, the company opened a 17,000-square-foot,
RFID-enabled warehouse testing facility in Dallas.
RFID is currently used for everything from pet locators and auto anti-theft
systems to library book trackers and toll-booth fast passes. Retailers and pharmaceutical
companies are among the leading verticals to embrace RFID.
A recent report from industry analysts at IDC, "The Impact of RFID on
the Network," warns that the increasing volumes of data generated by the
spread of RFID tags could seriously challenge an organization's ability to process
and interpret the information, and even compromise the network’s ability
to handle other critical tasks. The introduction of RFID-based systems increases
the need for network resiliency, the report finds, in order to deliver online
information whenever a tag requests it. The report also suggests that storage
needs in companies with large-scale RFID implementations will need to be flexible
and scalable.
These consequences are unlikely to slow the growth of RFID, which Sam Liu,
Sun's director of RFID product management, calls "a disruptive technology
that will revolutionize the network and the way companies do business."
Sun points to a recent study by Datamonitor, which concludes that large companies
and governments will spend about $6 billion on RFID hardware, software and services
by 2010. Venture Development Corporation has predicted that the device market
alone will be worth $700 million in 2005.
Java technology is installed in on more than two billion embedded devices,
Sarathy points out, up by 14 percent since June 2004.
The Sun Java System RFID Software for Java technology-enabled RFID devices
is available now for Java SE technology and will be available in early access
for Java ME at the end of summer 2005. It’s also available on the Solaris
OS and Linux. For more information, go to: www.sun.com/rfid.
About the Author
John K. Waters is a freelance writer based in Silicon Valley. He can be reached
at [email protected].