ZDNet UK


Skip to Main Content

ZDNet.co.uk - Winner of Best Business Website 2007
  1. Home
  2. News
  3. Blogs
  4. Reviews
  5. Prices
  6. Resources
  7. Community
  8. My ZDNet

 

ZDNet UK RSS Feeds


IT Jobs

Emerging tech Toolkit

Fujitsu's biometric scanner reads palms

Dan Ilett in Hannover ZDNet.co.uk

Published: 11 Mar 2005 14:10 GMT

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly
  • Post Comment

Cross Fujitsu's palm with silver and you'll get a biometric scanner — pictured in our CeBIT 2005 gallery — that identifies people by looking at the veins in the hands.

The infrared scanner, the Contactless Palm Vein Authentication System, was on show at CeBIT on Friday. It can reads palms from a short distance with few restrictions on hand positioning within certain limits — something Fujitsu says previous scanners have struggled with.

Fujitsu explained on Friday that vein patterns are difficult to forge, and claimed that the scanner was more hygienic than other scanners because it requires no physical contact to read palms.

It works using infrared light to scan for haemoglobin, which provides oxygen to cells in the body. Reduced haemoglobin absorbs near-infrared rays, so on the image it shows up as black with the rest of the hand coloured white.

The scanner took two years to develop. Japanese biometric engineers said the hardest part was getting the scanner to read veins that constantly move and change shape. The system had a false rejection rate of one percent and a false acceptance rate of 0.5 percent when tested on 700 people aged from 10 to 70 years-old.

For a look at the fun side of CeBIT, check out our CeBIT Digital Living special. Or visit ZDNet UK's CeBIT Toolkit for more enterprise technology stories and pictures from the show floor.

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly Print with Kyocera

Did you find this article useful?
108 out of 189 people found this useful



Company/Topic Alerts

Create a new alert from the list below:




Related Jobs

London Interest Rate Quant / Developer C++ - European Investment Bank

London Interest Rate Quant / Developer C++ - European Investment Bank. You will be working on the development of libraries for pricing structured ...

** Exotic Derivatives Business Analyst - Interest Rate Derivatives **

The exotic interest rate derivatives team are responsiblie for a front office pricing tool which is used for the valuation and risk analysis of ...

Excel VBA Quant Developer, Interest Rate Derivatives

You must have a very strong understanding of yield curves, pricing and risk of interest rate derivatives, and be comfortable with having significant ...

Discussions

1000030281 1000030281

Facebook Bans Firefox 3

Sunday 20 July 2008, 2:33 AM

1 comment
roger andre roger andre

SP3 Under Suspicion Again

Saturday 19 July 2008, 9:29 PM

2 comments

Blog Posts

Avatar roger andre

Facebook Bans Firefox 3

Saturday 19 July 2008, 7:54 PM

1 comment
Avatar geek

Windows Vista

Friday 18 July 2008, 7:58 PM

0 comments

Featured Talkback

While full medical records may be of (dubious) value at rear/base medical facilities, these could be provided much simpler by either physical disk or electronic transfer to an "in theatre" database for individuals posted in. That £80m (and it's associated running costs) could have been far better employed in resuscitating a disbanded infantry battalion or providing a big boost in equipment quality and quantity.

By: 1000215420

Read full story:
Photos: MoD unveils £80m IT health programme