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what are smart cards used for?

2006-10-12 05:52:50 · 3 answers · asked by Anonymous in Computers & Internet Computer Networking

3 answers

smart card




- A smart card is a plastic card about the size of a credit card, with an embedded microchip that can be loaded with data, used for telephone calling, electronic cash payments, and other applications, and then periodically refreshed for additional use. Currently or soon, you may be able to use a smart card to:
Dial a connection on a mobile telephone and be charged on a per-call basis
Establish your identity when logging on to an Internet access provider or to an online bank
Pay for parking at parking meters or to get on subways, trains, or buses
Give hospitals or doctors personal data without filling out a form
Make small purchases at electronic stores on the Web (a kind of cybercash)
Buy gasoline at a gasoline station
Over a billion smart cards are already in use. Currently, Europe is the region where they are most used. Ovum, a research firm, predicts that 2.7 billion smart cards will be shipped annually by 2003. Another study forecasts a $26.5 billion market for recharging smart cards by 2005. Compaq and Hewlett-Packard are reportedly working on keyboards that include smart card slots that can be read like bank credit cards. The hardware for making the cards and the devices that can read them is currently made principally by Bull, Gemplus, and Schlumberger.

How Smart Cards Work
A smart card contains more information than a magnetic stripe card and it can be programmed for different applications. Some cards can contain programming and data to support multiple applications and some can be updated to add new applications after they are issued. Smart cards can be designed to be inserted into a slot and read by a special reader or to be read at a distance, such as at a toll booth. Cards can be disposable (as at a trade-show) or reloadable (for most applications).
An industry standard interface between programming and PC hardware in a smart card has been defined by the PC/SC Working Group, representing Microsoft, IBM, Bull, Schlumberger, and other interested companies. Another standard is called OpenCard. There are two leading smart card operating systems: JavaCard and MULTOS.

2006-10-12 06:13:58 · answer #1 · answered by Tiger 5 · 0 0

Smart Cards are an intelligent source of information storing and accessing. Smart cards are also a secure way of communication where some security protocols need to be followed. There is a chip inserted in a Smart card, which stores information and can be accessed from any remote machine that has access to that data. In case you want training on what Smart Cards can do, please visit the website given below.

2013-12-10 02:16:32 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

smart cards are a computer security feature to identify a user in lieu of or in addition to username and password.

2006-10-12 12:56:01 · answer #3 · answered by David J 3 · 0 0

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2014-04-01 11:52:26 · answer #4 · answered by Aztlan Tovar 1 · 0 0

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