Campus Cards, College and University Identification and Security

Standards, new technologies, and lower prices will spur smart card growth in 2006

Tuesday, December 20, 2005

A panel of ID industry experts provided predictions for 2006. One of these glimpses into the future will appear here each day during December.

In last year’s predictions, I discussed greater adoption of smart card readers for securing buildings, making cashless purchases, tracking assets, and storing biometric identifiers. We saw quite a few of those predictions come to fruition. Many continue to hold true this year, such as the increased use of smart cards and readers for physical access and cashless purchasing. Other predictions fell short, particularly in the field of biometrics, where we still see the market adoption of the technology as lagging behind the technology offerings. This year, however, with new technologies emerging, coupled with government influence, we’ll see faster adoption of smart cards for use in multiple applications in 2006.


New technologies developed late last year eliminated prior barriers such as price, complexity, and the ‘wait’ for standards. Access control readers now support multiple standards and can read both proximity and smart card technologies simultaneously, thus easing the transition to a new solution. Additionally, because of increased adoption, prices have fallen, and integrators have become more educated on the new reader technology.

Future-proofing technology investments remains a major concern for companies. Many companies saw the benefits of smart cards early, but were waiting for published standards to avoid a rip-and-replace problem. The companies that have been waiting patiently for standards are being rewarded for their patience with new flexible technologies that allow them to move forward with assurance. These technologies bridge the gap between multiple standards and provide easy update paths as technology continues to evolve.

Government standards, such as FIPS 201, have also been released, expediting smart card adoption and mandating interoperability across government agencies. To emphasize the need for technologies that can flash-update and change with emerging standards, one only needs to look at the challenges faced by government agencies. For example, the federal government shifted from DESfire cards to the current PIV 2 card with its multi-tiered encryption algorithms, making a multi-technology access control reader (with the ability to flash update new standards) an ideal solution.

While smart cards today are still primarily used to mitigate threats and store simple data, the ability to run an operating system on smart cards (and associated applications) is opening up new realms of possibilities for what this technology can achieve.

In 2006, we’ll continue to see advances in smart card technology, but with heavier emphasis on adopting new innovative technologies, leveraging the converged physical and logical access control system.


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A new report from ABI Research reveals that the security sector is driving growth in the smart card industry, according to esecurityplanet.com.

“New revenues are coming from contactless/dual-interface cards and more applications require the greater security offered by smart cards. There remains a small, but solid, memory-based market, but higher-end secure microcontroller ICs and embedded solutions are driving the new growth. As a result of this and re-stocking inventory, we forecast that IC revenues will grow nearly 14% in 2010,” said ABI Research analyst John Devlin.

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Ingersoll Rand Security Technologies, provider of security solutions and manufacturer of Schlage contactless smart credentials and readers, have entered into a partnership with ScreenCheck International which will let customers design, encode, print and manage its card population through ScreenCheck’s BadgeMaker Online software.

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A partnership between idOnDemand and Directory Concepts could mean the streamlining of smart card issuance for buildings, computer login, electronic signatures, VPN and encryption management.

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Companiesandmarkets.com has released a new report detailing the status and expected future of biometric technology in North America. Specifically detailed in the report are market drivers and restraints, industry trends, competitive environment analysis and challenges facing those in the industry taking into consideration fingerprint, face recognition, iris recognition, hand geometry, voice verification, signature verification and other biometric modes.

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The July meeting of the influential Government Smart Card Interagency Advisory Board (IAB) was recently held in Washington D.C. FIPS201.com was on hand to cover the event and has provided, as a service to the IAB and the smart card community, an audio recording of the presentations. Click on the link below to access a list of audio and accompanying PowerPoint slides (in pdf format).

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Ingersoll Rand Security Technologies announced the availability of a new line of Schlage contactless smart credential readers - operating on 13.56 MHz frequency – and designed to address the industry’s current requirements while providing a foundation and scalability for future applications.

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