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Opening doors with your mobile phone

Nedap has successfully tested the use of mobile phone numbers as identifiers in its access control system AEOS¢ç.

 Photo by Nedap

The integration once more underlines the flexibility and potential of the AEOS¢ç concept.

Everyone knows the frustration.  You left home and forgot your keys.  In our private lives, this might result in a bit discomfort and perhaps some waiting, but for businesses it can have serious consequences.  Imagine being a service mechanic on 24h support. Sent out to fix an urgent problem, you arrive at the site, only to find out that you haven¡¯t got the appropriate keys or badge.
Worse, imagine being the emergency services losing valuable time, because you haven¡¯t got the proper authorizations to enter a site.  
In today¡¯s world almost everyone carries a mobile phone.  Each mobile phone has its own unique dedicated number.  In Nedap¡¯s access control system, AEOS¢ç, this number can be used to identify a person.  Basically it¡¯s no different than the other identifiers that can be used in the system (e.g., RFID cards, barcodes, license plate number, passport numbers, etc.)  The unique phone number is added to a person¡¯s authorization template, which means that it can be exactly specified at what locations and at which specific date and time a person can use his phone to get access to a specific location.  Opening a door becomes as simple as calling a pre-specified number.  With a simple phone call, you can give the command to open a door anywhere in the world.
GSM receivers have been around for some time.  The real innovation is perhaps also the most invisible one; it¡¯s the fact the Nedap¡¯s access control system AEOS¢ç isn¡¯t limited to one specific means of identification. 

 

For more information, please send your e-mails to swm@infothe.com.

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