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steps of an overall business process involving one or more organizations. Examples of such physical objects include trade items (products), logistic units, returnable assets, fixed assets, physical documents, etc. “Objects” may also refer to digital objects which participate in comparable business process steps. Examples of such digital objects include digital trade items (music downloads, electronic books, etc.), digital documents (electronic coupons, etc.), and so forth.
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141:(RFID) data carriers, and as of EPCIS 1.1 does not even require instance-level identification (for which the Electronic Product Code was originally designed). The EPCIS standard applies to all situations in which visibility event data is to be captured and shared, and the presence of “EPC” within the name is of historical significance only.
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in 2004, the PML concept was renamed
Electronic Product Code Information Services (EPCIS), and efforts began to create a global standard. In 2005, the first version of the EPCglobal Architecture Framework was published, which introduced EPCIS as a standard under development and showed how it related
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EPCIS 1.0 was first ratified in April 2007. At the time of ratification, over 30 companies had used the draft EPCIS standard to exchange data and collaborate with trading partners As of 2014, 24 commercial products had received certificates of compliance to the EPCIS standard from GS1. EPCIS 1.1 was
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Standard for creating and sharing visibility event data, both within and across enterprises, to enable users to gain a shared view of physical or digital objects within a relevant business context. "Objects" in the context of EPCIS typically refers to physical objects that are handled in physical
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EPCIS 1.1 and CBV 1.1 were ratified in May 2014. New features in EPCIS 1.1 include support for class-level identification (needed especially in bar code applications), a new event type to describe processes where inputs are transformed into outputs, and additional event data to describe business
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The EPCIS standard was originally conceived as part of a broader effort to enhance collaboration between trading partners by sharing of detailed information about physical or digital objects. The name EPCIS reflects the origins of this effort in the development of the
160:(PML), intended as "a common 'language' for describing physical objects, processes and environments". PML was one of four components of an "intelligent infrastructure" envisioned by the Auto-ID Center, the other three components being
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EPCIS 1.2 and CBV 1.2 were ratified in
September 2016. New features include a mechanism to declare a previous event as being erroneous, and a mechanism for including master data into the EPCIS document header.
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in
October, 2010. Despite the RFID-oriented origins of EPCIS, it came to be used in applications that used bar codes exclusively or
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EPCIS 1.0 was first ratified in April 2007. A companion standard, the EPC Core
Business Vocabulary 1.0, was ratified by
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to other components of an envisioned architecture for RFID-based tracking of physical objects within supply chains.
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https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/gs1-us-launches-gs1-us-rx-epcis-conformance-testing-program-300749184.html
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https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/gs1-us-launches-gs1-us-rx-epcis-conformance-testing-program-300749184.html
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ratified by GS1 in May, 2014. EPCIS 1.2 was ratified by GS1 (in conjunction with CBV 1.2) in
September 2016.
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407:), a free interactive tool for encoding and decoding EPCIS data and interacting with EPCIS repositories
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GS1 EPCIS Rx
Conformance tests are administered by their testing partner Drummond Group, LLC.
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The GS1 US Rx EPCIS Conformance
Testing Program is administered by Drummond Group, LLC.
168:, and the Object Naming Service. As the work of the MIT Auto-ID Center was taken up by
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137:(EPC). However, EPCIS does not require the use of Electronic Product Codes, nor of
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The
Physical Markup Language: A Universal Language for Physical Objects
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296:," MIT Auto-ID Center Whitepaper MIT-AUTOID-WH-003, February, 2001.
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In 2001, the MIT Auto-ID Center published a paper proposing the
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EPCIS and EPC Core
Business Vocabulary standard page
188:transfers and instance- or lot-level master data.
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386:version 1.2. GS1, Version 1.2, September 2016
122:Electronic Product Code Information Services
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109:Learn how and when to remove this message
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254:EPCglobal Software Certification Program
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45:Please improve this article by adding
396:EPCIS and CBVImplementation Guideline
322:," EPCglobal Standard, October, 2010.
307:The EPCglobal Architecture Framework
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320:Core Business Vocabulary Standard
228:The EPCIS Standard in Perspective
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184:in combination with RFID tags.
333:RFID Bar Code Interoperability
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139:Radio-frequency identification
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47:secondary or tertiary sources
272:, RFID Journal, 29 May 2014.
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243:," RFID Journal, April 2007.
230:," RFID Journal, April 2007.
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405:Visibility Data Workbench
241:The Ratification of EPCIS
158:Physical markup language
166:Electronic Product Code
135:Electronic Product Code
34:relies excessively on
124:(EPCIS) is a global
16:Global GS1 standard
305:Traub, K., et al,
270:RFID News Roundup
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152:History
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