One of Germany’s best-known makers of vacuum cleaners and carpets aims to tap a new market: intelligent flooring embedded with wireless chips.Vorwerk & Co. Teppichwerke GmbH & Co. is launching a textile flooring underlay equipped with radio frequency identification (RFID) tags, Vorwerk spokesman Thomas Weber said Friday. “After three years of research, we’re launching field tests with several companies that intend to use our smart-floor technology,” he said. “We’re now able to mass-produce the product.” The RFID-enabled flooring underlay is the result of a “thinking carpet” project launched together with German chip maker Infineon Technologies in 2003. The smart-floor underlay can be used to perform a number of tasks, such as navigating automated transport systems in buildings, according to Weber.In a first step, together with InMach Intelligente Maschinen GmbH, a robot manufacturer, Vorwerk is offering a bundled “smart-floor” package consisting of the RFID-enabled underlay, robots and software. The underlay enables robots to orient themselves in a room and move toward precise targets on the floor, using information stored in the embedded RFID tags, according to Weber. Systems administrators can manage the robots from a central point, sending data to them from a control PC via Wi-Fi or Bluetooth, he said.The RFID tags consist of a microchip joined to an antenna coil and attached to an ultra-thin sheet of polyethylene terephthalate (PET) plastic. Each tag has its own ID number, which can be detected and identified by the robot’s integrated RFID reader from up to 10 centimeters. The power required for reading the tags is supplied by the robot; the tags are passive, requiring no electrical voltage.Industrial floor cleaning could be one application. Data stored in the chips direct the robot to areas that have to be cleaned and away from those already cleaned.Vorwerk intends to market its smart-floor system to numerous groups, including building managers, hospitals and nursing homes. In a next step, the company aims to connect the RFID tags to form an intelligent network that can track movements and respond, according to Weber. The networked tags could be used to help secure floors from intruders or detect nursing home patients who have fallen on the floor, he said.The smart-floor technology was demonstrated at the CeBIT trade show in Hanover, Germany, which ended Wednesday. -John Blau, IDG News ServiceFor related CIO content, read The RFID Imperative and RFID Tagging for Hospital Patients.For related news coverage, read Study: RFID Tags Subject to Viruses and China to Use RFID for 1.3 Billion ID Cards.Keep checking in at our CIO News Alerts and TechInformer pages for updated news coverage. Related content brandpost The steep cost of a poor data management strategy Without a data management strategy, organizations stall digital progress, often putting their business trajectory at risk. Here’s how to move forward. By Jay Limbasiya, Global AI, Analytics, & Data Management Business Development, Unstructured Data Solutions, Dell Technologies Jun 09, 2023 6 mins Data Management feature How Capital One delivers data governance at scale With hundreds of petabytes of data in operation, the bank has adopted a hybrid model and a ‘sloped governance’ framework to ensure its lines of business get the data they need in real-time. By Thor Olavsrud Jun 09, 2023 6 mins Data Governance Data Management feature Assessing the business risk of AI bias The lengths to which AI can be biased are still being understood. The potential damage is, therefore, a big priority as companies increasingly use various AI tools for decision-making. By Karin Lindstrom Jun 09, 2023 4 mins CIO Artificial Intelligence IT Leadership brandpost Rebalancing through Recalibration: CIOs Operationalizing Pandemic-era Innovation By Kamal Nath, CEO, Sify Technologies Jun 08, 2023 6 mins CIO Digital Transformation Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe