engadget.com — 0.05mm x 0.05mm RFID chips. The new chips are 64 times smaller than the previous record holder, the 0.4mm x 0.4mm mu-chips, and nine times smaller than Hitachi's last year prototype, and yet still make room for a 128-bit ROM that can store a unique 38-digit ID number
Feb 15, 2007 View in Crawl 4
asdfglpwglionFeb 15, 2007
Also consider Vernor Vinge's 'A Deepness In The Sky'
philodoxFeb 15, 2007
except skin and hair are both terrible conductors
majordangerFeb 15, 2007
So these little things are laced in the bread and get stuck in the crevices of your colon for months like poppy seeds.Then as you pass through the turnstile at the sporting event, the swingarm antenna reads your RFID laced guts.So now it's aluminum under garments to go with my hat.. sigh... I got no secrets Uncle Sam wants anyway.
understudyFeb 16, 2007
Hello sir. On the way in our abdominal scanner noticed you seem to prefer Sweet N Low five to one over Equal._
eamonmanFeb 16, 2007
But not even a thousand times as dangerous as, POWDERED SWORDS! (aan)
jamthedudeFeb 16, 2007
Are you kidding me? Its ALREADY being used - for inventory control, among other things. Read the book Spychips and you'll see that companies are already using RFID technology that is able to follow consumer movements and decision-making through a supermarket.