Will Users Get Buried Under RFID Data?
A new report from VDC questions whether users are prepared for the tidal wave of data that item-level RFID could bring.
Many large retailers are "ill-prepared" to handle the likely flood of data expected from RFID implementations, and many havent even mastered their current bar-code systems, according to a new report from analyst firm VDC (Venture Development Corp.). "OK, weve now got most of our suppliers finally on board with automatic identification and data capture technologies via bar codes. Sure, lets throw RFID at them, too," said Mike Liard, RFID research program director at VDC. "Youve got to address Problem A before you start addressing Problems B, C and D." Once RFID (radio frequency identification) is operating at the item level, "Wal-Mart will push something like 7 Tbytes [terabytes] of data every day," Liard said. "Imagine that cycling through your system, or even a piece of that cycling through your system."VDCs point is that rather than replacing bar codes, RFID will co-exist with them for quite some time. Many IT executives may not be factoring that in when projecting network load and other operational issues.
Will wireless rewrite the RFID world? To find out, click here.
VDC found that todays retail IT systems are not yet up to the task of handling RFID in a sophisticated, integrated fashion.
"Weve got very archaic legacy systems that may not be able to handle the influx of data," Liard said. "Often, these are very disjointed systems that may not have centralized computing. You may have different folks doing different things at remote sites where things are not necessarily networked together.
"We need to be dealing with lots of integrationintegration with warehouse management systems [WMS], ERP [enterprise resource planning], supply chain execution systems," he said. "RFID is a complex technology, and it brings its own set of issues and challenges to systems integration.
"End-users have to ask, Where do I tie it into my enterprise? Do I do it on the back end? Do I do it on the front end? Do I do it with my warehouse management system or do I attach it to my ERP? A lot of those questions just havent been answered yet."
Most of todays RFID deployments have been limited to entry-level RFID efforts, where the data management issues are more controllable. Limited successes in todays trials may not accurately predict what will happen at the next stage, which Liard projects will happen from late 2005 through the middle of 2006.
Next Page: The RFID data management headaches are going to get a lot worse. 








