This new tracking label could help solve cargo theft
TechCrunch ·
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Imagine you’re Guy Fieri. (Stay with me.) It’s late 2024 and the president of your company calls to tell you that 24,000 bottles of your tequila have vanished. …
Imagine you’re Guy Fieri. (Stay with me.) It’s late 2024 and the president of your company calls to tell you that 24,000 bottles of your tequila have vanished. You’d presumably have a number of questions, but chief among them is likely: how did this happen? The answer is that global cargo theft is becoming increasingly sophisticated, all while the shipping and logistics industries are struggling to keep up. Unfortunately for the industry, much of the world’s cargo essentially goes dark between checkpoints at ports or distribution centers. On Wednesday, fleet management company Samsara is announcing its own solution to this problem in the form of a business-card sized sticky tracking label. Simply called the Samsara Tracking Label, it resembles any number of shipping labels that might be affixed to cargo big and small. But that label is hiding a small zinc battery and Bluetooth low energy tech that can be picked up by Samsara’s millions of other devices, offering real-time location in a disposable package. It’s not Samsara’s first tracker. The company has been helping customers track “assets” for years now, and in different ways, David Gal, Samsara’s vice president of connected equipment, told TechCrunch in an exclusive interview. But those solutions could be bulky and expensive, he said. “Customers basically said: ‘We need something that’s real time, and we need something that can be small enough to mount on any piece of equipment,” Gal said. …
Original source: TechCrunch
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