T+ink wins top prize at 2018 RILA (R)Tech Asset Protection Innovation Awards
Smart Shelf was named first place winner of the 2018 (R)Tech Asset Protection Innovation Awards by the Retail Industry Leaders Association (RILA).
T+ink All4Labels Partnership – Press Release
Touchcode has started a strategic partnership with All4Labels Group one of the largest manufacturers of self-adhesive labels and flexible packaging to create “smart labels” product packaging.
Retail tech meets conductive ink, printing an inventory-aware shelf
Tech Target – July 2016
An application of conductive ink is helping retailers monitor products on the shelf, correlating sales with placement and alerting security to probable theft.
What Suppliers Need to Know about NRF 2016
Consumer Goods Technology – January 10th, 2016
“Partnering with T-ink and WestRock, Intel demonstrated real-time inventory management through smart shelf and printable tag technology, which could be a game-changer for suppliers in terms of inventory visibility and OOS monitoring as well as planogram compliance.”
See Also:
Real-Time Communications: Savvy Shoppers, Brands Benefit from Smart Retail
Motorola’s Newest Moto X Print Ad Let’s You Change Its Colors
Fast Company – December 19th, 2013
Motorola and its agency Digitas tapped T-Ink to find a way around the static image with this new ad appearing in Wired‘s January issue.
See Also:
Ad Age: Motorola Puts Some High-Tech Into Its Old-Media Ad Plan For Moto X
Ad Week: Print Ad for Moto X Lets You Change the Phone’s Color With the Push of a Button
Engadget: Wired’s LED-powered Moto X ad lets you try custom colors before you buy
Gizmodo: This Interactive Moto X Ad Isn’t Online, It’s In a Magazine
Mashable: Print Ad for the Moto X Changes Colors When You Touch It
A Simpler Way to Connect the Physical With the Virtual
Wall Street Journal – October 16th, 2012
Touchcode—which also took the top spot in the Innovation Awards’ Wireless category—has another edge over QR codes: security.
Hot Off the Presses, Conductive Ink
The New York Times – June 30th, 2012
One company, T-Ink, has developed inks so robust that circuits, sensors and switches can be printed on flat plastic and then molded into three-dimensional components.