Role of RFID in Casinos to be Featured
at 2008 IEEE RFID Conference in Las Vegas
WASHINGTON (14 April 2008)
—
Video poker machines aren't the only high-tech
applications in casinos. Radio Frequency
Identification (RFID) technology is becoming
increasingly more widespread in the gaming
industry.
"RFID
in Casinos" will be examined at a luncheon panel
—
Thursday 17 April from noon to 1:30
—
during the second IEEE International Conference
on RFID (IEEE RFID 2008) at Las Vegas' Venetian
Resort-Hotel-Casino, 16-17 April.
"Through wireless communications, RFID can
provide real-time visibility to casino
management in tracking people and high-value
products," said panel moderator Harry Pappas,
president and CEO of the International RFID
Business Association.
"If
a million dollars worth of casino chips or coins
are being moved across a facility, management
wants to know its status at any given time,
who's pushing the cage and where it is in the
facility."
"RFID
in Casinos" panelists include Jim Grubbs,
security supervisor and training coordinator at
Caesars Palace; Jeff Markman, president of
Positek RFID; and John M. Kendall, president and
CEO of CHIPCO International.
Kendall said his company, a leading maker of
gaming chips, has been working with RFID for
more than 15 years. It has integrated RFID into
chips to help stop counterfeiting and theft and
provide functional data. His presentation will
describe how to evaluate RFID technology,
illustrate radio frequency choices based on
application, and provide guidance in developing
a return-on-investment formula for such new
technology investments.
"We
are successfully working with our technology
system partners on player tracking, eliminating
counterfeit chips, stopping employee theft,
providing data collection on functional
automation and validating player and employee
performance," Kendall said.
An
enabling technology, RFID uses tags and readers
to transmit a unique number. The tags store
information on a microchip connected to a radio
antenna, while the readers emit radio waves that
exchange signals with the tags.
Casinos are continually faced with the challenge
of securing their operations. Grubbs, who works
for one most successful casinos on the Las Vegas
Strip, said the gaming industry is still
implementing RFID.
"Even though it has been used to some extent in
tracking gaming chips, the technology is really
just starting to be implemented in other
security applications," Grubbs said. "To some
extent, we're still learning how to apply and
sell the value of RFID to senior management.,
"But I have seen how well RFID proximity badging
has worked in the corporate sector at The Boeing
Company, and if it works for their top-secret
areas, I'd like to use this technology and
enhance our facility security."
Markman's Positek RFID company is a leading
supplier of RFID-enabled sorting and tracking
software to the textile rental industry. He said
RFID technology in uniforms is widely employed
in casinos.
"Because of the considerable cost of uniforms,
the casino and hospitality industry have long
been tracking items with bar codes," Markman
said. "RFID eliminates the labor associated with
tracking and provides for more accurate and
up-to-date tracking."
Pappas, whose International RFID Business
Association is focused on developing workplace
standards for RFID education, training and
certification, sees the value of RFID in gaming.
"RFID
technologies are an ever-growing part of the
casino hospitality industry worldwide," Pappas
said. "This includes RFID tags embedded in
casino chips to ward off counterfeiting;
tracking high-value mobile assets, including
expensive wines and liquor; monitoring linens
and robes in hotel rooms and employee uniforms
in the laundry; as well as controlling access to
critical areas of the casino operations
—
all under a closed-end loop environment."
IEEE
RFID 2008 will address the technical and policy
challenges of RFID technologies, examine job
opportunities and feature 44 technical papers by
leading academic and industrial researchers from
around the world. The conference is co-located
with RFID Journal Live! executive conference and
exhibition (www.rfidjournalevents.com/live/).
For
more information, see
www.ieee-rfid.org/2008. You can register
through partner RFID Journal Live! by going to
www.rfidjournalevents.com/live/registration_options.php.
Choose
https://www.one-stop-registration.com/rfidlive/OSR.Index.
IEEE-USA and the IEEE TAB New Technology
Directions Committee (www.ieee.org/web/volunteers/tab/tab_507.html)
are financial co-sponsors for IEEE RFID 2008.
IEEE-USA President Russ Lefevre chairs the
committee.
IEEE
RFID 2008 is funded in part by a U.S. Army
Research Office grant of $5,000, which
represents seven percent of the total estimated
cost of the conference.
IEEE-USA advances the public good and promotes
the careers and public policy interests of more
than 215,000 engineers, scientists and allied
professionals who are U.S. members of the IEEE.
IEEE-USA is part of the IEEE, the world's
largest technical professional society with
375,000 members in 160 countries. See
www.ieeeusa.org.
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Contacts:
Brian Fraser
Publicity Chair, IEEE RFID 2008
Phone: + 1 972 977 3517
Email: bfraserpr@verizon.net
Chris McManes
IEEE-USA Public Relations Manager
Phone: + 1 202 530 8356
E-mail: c.mcmanes@ieee.org