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Brought to you by the Brave New World.
South Dakota-based Blinkspot
manufactures iris scanners specifically for use on school buses. When
elementary school students come aboard, they look into a scanner (it
looks like a pair of binoculars). The reader will beep if they're on the
right bus and honk if they're on the wrong one.
The Blinkspot
scanner syncs with a mobile app that parents can use to see where their
child is. Every time a child boards or exits the bus, his parent gets an
email or text with the child's photograph, a Google map where they
boarded or exited the bus, as well as the time and date.
Iris-scanning is part of a growing trend called "biometrics," a type of
security that recognizes physical characteristics to identify people. As
the technology becomes faster and cheaper to build, several security
equipment manufacturers are looking at biometric methods like iris
scanning as the ID badge of the future.
In the next year,
industry insiders say the technology will be available all over-- from
banks to airports. That means instead of entering your pin number, you
can gain access to an ATM in a blink. Used in an airport, the system
will analyze your iris as you pass through security, identifying and
welcoming you by name.
One company developing that technology
is Eyelock. The company's scanners are already in use in foreign
airports and at high-security offices, including Bank of America's (BAC, Fortune 500) North Carolina headquarters.
Eyelock's technology records video of your eyeball and uses an algorithm to find the best image of each eye. Eyelock
is also entering the school market, piloting their devices in
elementary school districts and nursery schools around the country. (Read more.)
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