22-11-2012 18:41 - edited 22-11-2012 18:42
22-11-2012 18:41 - edited 22-11-2012 18:42
How many people have started utilising this tech in your phones or credit/debit cards?
I have a friend who has developed a case for NFC equipped phone that can distort the signal unless its being actively used by the user.
He also has developed a credit card sized deflecter for use in wallet applications (saves buying a new wallet/you can keep the wallet/purse of your choice)
I'm just trying to gather info into the useage of the tech before I drop some money into his designs to further the concepts:)
Look forward to your replies:)
EDIT:I think I've posted in the wrong section and it won't let me delete:( rather than spam if a mod could move it:)
on 26-11-2012 08:28
on 26-11-2012 08:28
Isn't that how the fingerprint dust sticks anyway ?
@Liquid wrote:
The materials left behind from touching somthing (eg fingerprint) could it be conductive enough to carry a micro current?
on 26-11-2012 11:26
on 26-11-2012 11:26
27-11-2012 03:13 - edited 27-11-2012 03:14
27-11-2012 03:13 - edited 27-11-2012 03:14
Brilliant our patent application has been accepted were sufficiently different enough:)
Thank you mi5:) almost lost hope haha.
Right next question does anyone know the legality of purchasing blank rfid credit cards in the uk?
I can find rfid cards that run on the same frequency but they don't contain the normal credit card chip(legal?)
does anyone know a uk vendor? eBay and Hong Kong don't sound awefully appealing:(
Apparently the wait for patent acceptance can be months:(
on 27-11-2012 19:11
You can try Alibaba but most will be far east purchases.
on 27-11-2012 19:20
Are you after just the blank cards with the RFID tag in them? What frequency do they need to be?
on 27-11-2012 19:35
on 27-11-2012 19:35
on 27-11-2012 19:40
I only ask cause I know that keyless entry on cars use different frequencies and that is my only guideline.
on 27-11-2012 19:42
on 27-11-2012 19:42
on 27-11-2012 19:44
http://shop.madebyoomph.co.uk
Might be able to help or point you in the right direction.
on 27-11-2012 19:52
on 27-11-2012 19:52