Tag Powersave
US-2015371068-A1 · Dec 24, 2015 · US
US2022012439A1 · US · A1
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-2022012439-A1 |
| Application number | US-202117322099-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | A1 |
| Filing date | May 17, 2021 |
| Priority date | Oct 13, 2014 |
| Publication date | Jan 13, 2022 |
| Grant date | — |
A practical reading order for non-experts. Skip the full description unless you need deep technical detail.
What the patent document calls the invention.
A short plain-language summary of the technical disclosure.
Who owns or filed the patent and who is credited as inventor.
Filing, priority, publication, and grant dates set the timeline.
The legal scope of protection — read this for what is actually claimed.
Technology tags used to group this patent with similar filings.
Prior art links and similar publications in this corpus.
Official abstract text for this publication.
A high speed tabletop and industrial printer is disclosed with integrated high speed RFID encoding and verification at the same time. The industrial printer simultaneously prints on and electronically encodes/verifies RFID labels, tags, and/or stickers attached to a continuous web. The industrial printer comprises a lighted sensor array for indexing the printing to the RFID tags; and a cutter powered from the industrial printer for cutting the web that the RFID tags are disposed on. The industrial printer comprises two RFID reader/writers that are individually controlled. Specifically, one of the RFID reader/writers comprises the ability to electronically encode the RFID tags while the web is moving; and the second RFID reader/writer uses an additional RFID module and antenna on the printer for verifying the data encoded to the RFID tags.
Opening claim text (preview).
1 . A commercial printer device for printing on and electronically encoding and verifying one or more radio frequency identification (RFID) labels, tags, or stickers attached to a continuous web, comprising: a print head capable of printing on the continuous web; and an RFID reader/writer configured to electronically encodes the RFID label, tag, or sticker with data while the continuous web is moving; wherein the printer device can read and encode and print on the RFID label, tag, or sticker without damaging the RFID tag; and wherein the printer is configured to send as one command: write EPC, write access, and read EPC. 2 . The printer device of claim 1 , wherein encoding and printing occurs substantially simultaneously. 3 . The printer device of claim 2 , further comprising a second RFID reader/writer module that verifies the data encoded to the RFID label, tag, or sticker. 4 . The printer device of claim 3 , wherein the second RFID reader/writer module is individually controlled from the RFID reader/writer module that electronically encodes the RFID label, tag, or sticker, such that the printer device can encode and verify simultaneously. 5 . The printed device of claim 4 , further comprising a lighted sensor array that automatically detects aperture sense marks on the continuous web to correctly index printing to the RFID label, tag, or sticker. 6 . The printer device of claim 1 , further comprising a main processor and an NFC I 2 C inlay for the purposes of communicating with the main processor. 7 . (canceled). 8 . The printer device of claim 1 , wherein the print head automatically detects dot density. 9 . The printer of claim 1 , further comprising supply guides and a UHF temperature inlay contained under the supply guides for the purpose of reading the printer's temperature and using the temperature for optimizing printer performance. 10 . The printer device of claim 1 , wherein the print head can accept input information from Portable Document Format (PDF) or Personalized Print Markup Language (PPML). 11 . The printer device of claim 1 , wherein the continuous web is arranged in a sheet or roll form so that the RFID tags can be printed or encoded as part of a continuous process without stopping the web motion. 12 . (canceled) 13 . (canceled) 14 . (canceled) 15 . (canceled) 16 . (canceled) 17 . (canceled) 18 . (canceled) 19 . (canceled) 20 . (canceled) 21 . A method, comprising: providing a commercial printer device configured for printing on and electronically encoding and verifying a radio frequency identification (RFID) label, tag, or sticker attached to a continuous web, the commercial printer device comprising a print head capable of printing on the continuous web, and an RFID reader/writer; using the commercial printer device, sending as one command, write EPC, write access, and read EPC, wherein the RFID reader/writer electronically encodes the RFID label, tag, or sticker with data while the continuous web is moving, and wherein the commercial printer device reads, encodes, and prints on the RFID label, tag, or sticker without damaging the RFID label, tag, or sticker. 22 . The method of claim 21 , further comprising: using the commercial printer device, encoding and verifying in a sequential manner, substantially simultaneously or simultaneously, and using the commercial printer device, reading, encoding, and printing on the RFID label, tag, or sticker without damaging the RFID label, tag, or sticker; 23 . The method of claim 21 , further comprising: using a second RFID reader/writer of the commercial printer device, verifying the data encoded to the RFID label, tag, or sticker, wherein the second RFID reader/writer is individually controlled from the RFID reader/writer that electronically encodes the RFID label, tag, or sticker. 24 . The method of claim 21 , further comprising: feeding a label in position; fetching EPC data from memory; generating a program command with an EPC data packet; sending a packet to an RFID module; receiving an RFID module response packet; extracting response data from the packet; and decoding the response data. 25 . The method of claim 21 , wherein the printer device further comprises a lighted sensor array, the method further comprising: Using the lighted sensor array, automatically detecting aperture sense marks on the continuous web to correctly index printing to the RFID label, tag, or sticker. 26 . The method of claim 21 , wherein the printer device further comprises a NFC I2C inlay for the purposes of communicating with a main processor. 27 . The method of claim 21 , wherein the print head is a thermal print head that automatically detects dot density. 28 . The method of claim 21 , wherein the printer device further comprises a UHF temperature inlay contained under supply guides for the purpose of reading the printer's temperature and using the temperature for optimizing printer performance. 29 . The method of claim 21 , wherein, the print head can accept input information from Portable Document Format (PDF) Personalized Print Markup Language (PPML) or JSON (Java Script Object Notation). 30 . The method of claim 21 , wherein the continuous web is arranged in a sheet or roll form so that the RFID tags can be printed or encoded as part of a continuous process without stopping the web motion. 31 . The method of claim 21 , further comprising determining whether the RFID reader/writer responded with an error. 32 . The method of claim 31 , wherein when the RFID reader/writer did respond with an error, then the process further comprises: decoding and displaying error message on an LCD screen; and feeding and printing overstrike image on label. 33 . The method of claim 31 , wherein the RFID reader/writer did not respond with an error, then the process further comprises: feeding and printing image defined by format and batch data on label. 34 . The method of claim 21 , wherein after the image is fed and printed, the process reverts to a prior operation and a label is fed into position. 35 . The method of claim 21 , further comprising, using the RFID reader/writer, determining whether an RFID transponder is within its field by reading the RFID transponder's identification code. 36 . The method of claim 21 , further comprising, using the RFID reader/writer, encoding at least one RFID label, tag, or sticker with data while the web is moving. 37 . The method of claim 21 , further comprising, using a second RFID reader/writer, verifying that the data has been programmed into the RFID transponder and that the data was correctly written into the RFID transponder.
Mechanisms producing characters by printing and also producing a record by other means {, e.g. printer combined with RFID writer} · CPC title
Methods or arrangements for verifying the correctness of markings on a record carrier; Column detection devices · CPC title
Tape printers; Label printers · CPC title
the arrangement being a circuit for emulating a plurality of record carriers, e.g. a single RFID tag capable of representing itself to a reader as a cloud of RFID tags · CPC title
the record carrier comprising an arrangement for non-contact communication, e.g. wireless communication circuits on transponder cards, non-contact smart cards or RFIDs · CPC title
Related publications grouped by family.
Answers are generated from the same data shown on this page.