

One of the possible real life application is crowd control, like the seasonal pilgrimage of Mecca.
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Plus both hardware and software are open source which make this alternative considerably attractive in term of pricing comparing to other real time tracking RFID system. The devices could run for several months before requiring a new battery.

One of the greatest strength in OpenBeacon tag comparing to other Wi- Fi based active RFID tracking system is longer battery life by transmit and then sleep, cutting back on power consumption. The intention of this project is to offer a wide range of use cases such as visitor or item tracking and wireless remote control with a free self-contained and low-cost RFID design. OpenBeacon is designed as a transceiver device and therefore both transmits and receives radio waves.
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The device contains a unique serial number, but may have other information. Open Beacon uses chips from Nordic Semiconductor ASA that transmit and receive over the 2.4GHz frequency, which is available for unlicensed use in many countries. This Initiative is a free design for an active RFID device which operates in the 2.4GHz ISM band. Touching an attendee on the screen displayed a profile that the person could voluntarily add. Also Open Beacon worked with partners to create a three dimensional model of the conference center and anyone could use touch-screen monitors that displayed the location of attendees on the model. The creators of the Open Beacon system sold the RFID tags at US$13 each to attendees who volunteered to be tracked during the four-day event. OpenBeacon is an open source wireless tracking system for following people around buildings got its first public use last week at the Chaos Communication Congress in Berlin. Though this platform might not yet be ready for the enterprise prime time, however it's worth a good look. Open source still manage finding its way advancing collaboration of creativity among the tech community. Today I ran into some nifty news in the RFID business front, apparently in the realm of cutting edge tracking logistics 2.0.
