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To: Prospector who wrote (1286)7/7/1998 4:17:00 PM
From: r laird  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 7617
 
fingerprint
By Michael Kanellos
Staff Writer, CNET NEWS.COM
July 7, 1998, 10:30 a.m. PT

Taking a design cue from '60s spy movies,
Compaq Computer today outlined a new security
system that will allow users to log in by fingerprint.

Due in August, the
company's fingerprint
recognition system will be
a device approximately
half the size of a PC
mouse and calibrated to
recognize a 3D image of
an individual's fingerprint,
according to Michael Takemura, director for
Compaq product marketing for desktops in North
America.

To log in, users will press their chosen finger against
the plane of the device. A microcamera will then
cross-check the image against stored data about
the digit. If a match occurs, the user will be logged
onto the network.

The underlying software for the system comes from
Identicator and will be the first in a series of
"biometric" products the company hopes to bring to
the market.

Users afraid that someone might try to lift a
fingerprint off an old can of Fresca need not worry.
Both the device and fingerprint recognition software
work with 3D images of a fingerprint. "You would
have to convert a 2D image to a 3D image,"
Takemura said. People with unusually sweaty
hands can also use the device without concern
because it is not sensitive to heat.

While other companies have released fingerprint ID
systems, Compaq's is the first to be priced
attractively, asserted Takemura. The device and
necessary software will cost just under $100 and
be marketed with Compaq's Deskpro and Armada
lines.