NTT has introduced the first RedTaction security entrance/exit kit. RedTaction is a human body communication technology. It utilizes the surface of the human body as a transmission path. NTT announced the sale of the Firmo evaluation kit, which includes an embeddable receiver, five card-type transmitters and a touch plate for the receiver. The cost for the Firmo kit is approximately $7,722.
Most people are familiar with WAN or LAN transmissions. RedTaction is a human area network. Its acronymn is HAN. It is the ability to utilize the body surface as the transmission for connectivity to terminals. NTT developed a photonic electric field sensor. This enables weak electric fields found on the surface of the human body to be measured by detecting changes in the optical properties of an electro-optic crystal with a laser beam.
By using the new extremely sensitive photonic field sensor, RedTaction is able to create duplex communications over the entire body at 10Mbps. A transmission path is formed the moment the human body comes in contact with the RedTaction transceiver. It is a safe method of achieving high speed network transmission because no current enters the body mass. Any part of the body can act as a transmitter. In fact, the trasmission is not obstructed by rubber sole shoes or clothing. Everything is linked to the natural body movements of the individual.
According to NTT, the advantage of the use of HAN based Firmo security system ensures a higher level of security because the signal range is limited to several millimeters to several centimeters from the surface of the human body or clothing. Firmo means fairy motion. This is the conceptual framework of the Firmo security system. It is like the aura surrounding Tinkerbell. This is the field of Firmo and no more.
Other card security systems utilizing short-range wireless communications often times allow intruders several meters or more to gain entrance. This situation occurs when an individual with card authorization to enter a secure area may not be aware of someone in the area. Inadvertently, security is breached. The NTT Firmo security network would limit entrance to the single body.
According to NTT, the card-type transmitter runs on a battery with a one year life. It is a commercial battery that is available on the open market. The system uses a 5MH carrier wave in communication. This is equivalent to the high frequency band used by ham radios. It will not interfere with ham frequency waves because it is 20db lower than the lowest radio frequency band. As a safeguard, NTT improved upon the electrode structure to prevent the waves from being emitted.
Copyright 2008 Mary Anne Simpson & Physorg.com.
All rights reserved. Web Sites and Bloggers may provide the introductory paragraph and a link to the story, but may not copy, redistribute, rewrite or publish the story in whole or in part without written permission of the author or publisher.
Related stories:
Grief leads father to create bomb-defusing robot
(AP) -- The knock on Brian Hart's door came at 6 a.m. An Army colonel, a priest and a police officer had come to tell Hart and his wife that their 20-year-old son had been killed when his military vehicle was ambushed in Iraq.
Videos of US patient deaths shock
Video footage of two patients who collapsed and died in US hospital emergency rooms and were apparently ignored by staff has sparked outrage and dismissals, reports said Wednesday.
Fortified cassava could provide a day's nutrition in a single meal
Scientists have determined how to fortify the cassava plant, a staple root crop in many developing countries, with enough vitamins, minerals and protein to provide the poor and malnourished with a day's worth of nutrition in a single meal.
Nanotubes could help study retrovirus transmission between human cells
Recent findings by medical researchers indicate that naturally occurring nanotubes may serve as tunnels that protect retroviruses and bacteria in transit from diseased to healthy cells — a fact that may explain why vaccines fare poorly against some invaders.
Nanotubes could aid understanding of retrovirus transmission between human cells
Recent findings by medical researchers indicate that naturally occurring nanotubes may serve as tunnels that protect retroviruses and bacteria in transit from diseased to healthy cells — a fact that may explain why vaccines fare poorly against some invaders.
MSU researcher creates system helping police to match tattoos to suspects
A Michigan State University researcher has created an automatic image retrieval system, whereby law enforcement agencies will be able to match scars, marks and tattoos to identify suspects and victims.
Intelligent Computers See Your Human Traits
Today’s computers can do a lot as far as computation goes, but they tend to do it in an impersonal, stand-offish way, so to speak. However, computer engineers are busy changing that, as they try to give computers a bit of a personal touch to make human-computer interaction more natural and friendly.
Economist labors over employment relationships
When John Heywood travels to China this summer, he’ll be there not only to teach, but also to study a new aspect of the country’s economy: the advent of worker rights.