By K.C. Jones , TechWeb Technology News
Of about 20 people who have implanted themselves with RFID chips for experimental, recreational or personal reasons and posted their stories on the Internet, at least three were at a meeting in New York City Wednesday.
They gathered with about 150 people to watch Mikey Sklar, a vice president of high performance computing and UNIX engineering for a New York investment bank, give a presentation on how and why he implanted himself.
Sklar, who makes electronic clothing with slogans such as "Technology will save us," said that he and his girlfriend went to a clothing swap in Brooklyn, where he gave a workshop on how to make pants pockets that block common RFID signals. Then, he discovered Amal Graafstra's online explanation of how and why he implanted himself.
Graafstra, like others, participated in the forum for those who are tagged.
"Wallets: you lose; watches: you forget; keys: I lock in the car," Graafstra said Wednesday after traveling from his home in Vancouver, B. C. to New York City to watch Sklar's presentation at monthly dorkbot-nyc meeting. "These items were really representing me and basically identifying me to whatever systems they worked with."
He's working on a computer system for his door and has already inspired his girlfriend, Jennifer Tomblin, to get "tagged."
Sklar, however, is hoping to use his chip for entertainment and convenience. He's rigging his computer with a Bluetooth device and an RFID reader so he can wave his hand and the computer will identify him. Then, it will pull up all of the content he prefers, including weather reports, RSS feeds and email. The wireless device will send the information across the room to an electronic display built by Sklar to allow him to access online information from anywhere in his living room.
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