Besides the chemical ways, science electronic also focus more attentions to provide technologies solutions that help to solve such serious food issues.
Recent weeks, due to the prevalence of unsafe milk powders and other chemical pollution food in China and the outbreak of “poison cucumber” induced hemolytic uremic syndrome in some European countries, food safety issues are getting increasing concerns all over the world.
Besides the chemical ways, science electronic also focus more attentions to provide technologies solutions that help to solve such serious food issues.
Today’s technique is aimed to help customers to know more about the food that would stay in their stomachs. It is not a much innovative technique in current electronic component industry, but its Working principle and practical functions are worth references by law enforcement. It is called RFID.
RFID, short for Radio Frequency ID, tags have found their way into a wide variety of applications. These pellets, which are often roughly the same size as a grain of rice, can help us to be reunited with our lost pets, keep towels inside the hotel, and keep big box stores shipping the right boxes to the right places at the right time.
In time you may even find them inside your own stomach. At least they will be there if Hannes Harms has anything to say about it. Mr. Harms, who is currently a design engineering student at the Royal College of Art in London, has designed the NutriSmart system. The system is based on edible RFID tags that will tell you more about your food then you ever wanted to know.
The system would be able to not only give you complete nutritional data on the food that you are about to consume, but able to tell you the entire supply chain behind everything that you are putting into your mouth. While this could be good news for diabetics, people with serious food allergies, and vegans, it also has applications outside of the medical.
A properly equipped refrigerator would be able to give the user a look at everything that the box contains, and when it is going to go bad.
The system can also be paired with a “Smart plate”, which would allow the embedded reader in the dish to tell you about the caloric and nutrition information about what you are eating, as well as how many miles it has come to be on your plate. The data can then be sent to your cell phones, via a Bluetooth connection.
However, as for how to deal with the used RFID tags, no relevant argument are provided yet. Also, the system now is not available in medical field.
As for the Chinese market, we may be use the technology to solve the quality problem first, then consider the nutritional problems.
Article source: http://www.hqew.net/article/showdetails-article-216.html
ber” induced hemolytic uremic syndrome in some European countries, food safety issues are getting increasing concerns all over the world.
Besides the chemical ways, science electronic also focus more attentions to provide technologies solutions that help to solve such serious food issues.
Today’s technique is aimed to help customers to know more about the food that would stay in their stomachs. It is not a much innovative technique in current electronic component industry, but its Working principle and practical functions are worth references by law enforcement. It is called RFID.
RFID, short for Radio Frequency ID, tags have found their way into a wide variety of applications. These pellets, which are often roughly the same size as a grain of rice, can help us to be reunited with our lost pets, keep towels inside the hotel, and keep big box stores shipping the right boxes to the right places at the right time.
In time you may even find them inside your own stomach. At least they will be there if Hannes Harms has anything to say about it. Mr. Harms, who is currently a design engineering student at the Royal College of Art in London, has designed the NutriSmart system. The system is based on edible RFID tags that will tell you more about your food then you ever wanted to know.
The system would be able to not only give you complete nutritional data on the food that you are about to consume, but able to tell you the entire supply chain behind everything that you are putting into your mouth. While this could be good news for diabetics, people with serious food allergies, and vegans, it also has applications outside of the medical.
A properly equipped refrigerator would be able to give the user a look at everything that the box contains, and when it is going to go bad.
The system can also be paired with a “Smart plate”, which would allow the embedded reader in the dish to tell you about the caloric and nutrition information about what you are eating, as well as how many miles it has come to be on your plate. The data can then be sent to your cell phones, via a Bluetooth connection.
However, as for how to deal with the used RFID tags, no relevant argument are provided yet. Also, the system now is not available in medical field.
As for the Chinese market, we may be use the technology to solve the quality problem first, then consider the nutritional problems.
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