March 9, 2007

RFID Printer

Ready for Widespread RFID Printing Adoption
The SL4M offers customers more choices in printer encoders based on applications and production requirements. The SL4M also is available in a field-upgradeable, RFID-ready thermal printer model and does not require a factory return for RFID conversion.

The SL4M can integrate seamlessly into almost any bar code environment with support for six printer languages and direct XML printing for either 203 or 305 dpi resolution. Its unique user-friendly, icon-driven graphic interface offers easy configuration and installation. Offering up to twice the memory as other products in its class, the SL4M has 32MB RAM and 8MB Flash for faster processing and label storage. The SL4M’s metal printer design makes its Printronix heritage unmistakable with built-in quality and reliable performance for mission-critical applications.

Label Interoperability
With the widest breadth of Class 1 Gen 2 UHF tag support and superior encoding performance, the SL4M’s advanced tag calibration allows users to experiment with new tags and inlays and deplete existing media inventory of non-standard tag positions.

“When Printronix launched the industry’s first commercially available multi-protocol UHF RFID printer encoder with the SL series, we gave our customers and partners the ability to leverage RFID printing solutions that removed the major barriers to adoption,” said Brad Jarvis, director, product marketing, Printronix. “Today, Printronix becomes the first to offer certified Gen 2 hardware compliance with label interoperability throughout the entire family of desktop printer encoders and automated encoder printer/applicators.”

With the SL4M, Printronix has once again set industry pace by eliminating customer-adoption barriers while lowering the cost of operation. Operations will have the ability to standardize on interoperable label specifications around the globe for applications that range from high-speed automation down to cost-effective convenience encoding regardless of their environments.

No comments: