Business Services Industry
Lead the way: new gadgets blaze trails for mobile workers
Entrepreneur, Sept, 2003 by Mike Hogan
Soon, your UPS delivery driver will be packing a piece of wireless hardware that could broaden the horizon of all mobile workers. The DIAD IV is a downsized tablet PC with GPS to pinpoint a driver's location, and a cell phone and keypad for messaging. If a dispatcher calls with a route change, a map downloaded to the DIAD shows the way. At the warehouse, your digital signature and other delivery information is blipped to Wi-Fi, Bluetooth or infrared receivers as circumstances dictate.
Today, the DIAD captures outgoing delivery information by wireless download or with a swipe over a package bar code. Someday, when RFID transmitters fit into a shipping label, DIAD will be automatically "loaded" when the driver steps into the truck.
- Most Popular Articles in Business
- Research and Markets : Tesco Plc - SWOT Framework Analysis
- Do Us a Flavor - Ben & Jerry's Issues a Call for Euphoric New Flavors
- eBay made easy: ready to start an eBay business? These 5 simple steps will ...
- Katrina's lawsuit surge: a legal battle to force insurers to pay for flood ...
- Wal-Mart's newest distribution center opened last month near the southwest ...
- More »
It will take a couple of years for this technology to reach all UPS drivers in 200 countries. By then, some of these capabilities will be in mass-market devices with price tags you can afford. DIAD designer Symbol Technologies already puts together device combinations for other companies.
What could global positioning, direct-connect communications services and on-the-fly rerouting do for your delivery or sales force?
COPYRIGHT 2003 Entrepreneur Media, Inc.
COPYRIGHT 2008 Gale, Cengage Learning
