Skip to main content

ABnote offers NFC bridging technology at CARTES 2013

ABnote’s evolution from card manufacturer to card manufacturer and provisioner of data reflects financial institutions’ own migration away from magnetic stripe to RFID and EMV technologies, says Jim Ellis, Senior Vice President, North America.
November 20, 2013 Read time: 2 mins
John Ekers, Global CIO for ABnote, with the OTI WAVE
ABnote’s evolution from card manufacturer to card manufacturer and provisioner of data reflects financial institutions’ own migration away from magnetic stripe to RFID and EMV technologies, says Jim Ellis, Senior Vice President, North America.

A showcase product this year is the OTI WAVE, a Secure Element-equipped bridging technology which will allow apps such as payment, loyalty and, indeed, any other type of card (such as hotel room electronic door keys) to be added to customers’ smart phones ahead of the more widespread take-up of NFC-enabled devices.

In fact, ABNote has offered merchants a Trusted Service Manager/Platform (TSM/TSP) capability for the last three years, he adds, and the OTI WAVE has itself evolved from a sleeve or case into a plug-in device which gets away from rapidly evolving phone form factors.

Merchants can therefore go to market with a scalable approach for any smartphone. And once a merchant has made a card available via the TSM, all customers have to do is plug in the OTI WAVE, register, download an app and sign in. In the hotel trade, for example, this means that a loyalty customer can upon arrival already have an electronic key installed in his or her phone. The OTI WAVE can also be used to install a wide variety of other apps such as those for RFID-based transit payment and student ID. It allows merchants to more tightly control access to customers while allowing individuals greater control over the electronic cards carried on their own phones, Ellis says.
%$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkExternal www.abnote.com Visit: www.abnote.com false http://www.abnote.com/ false false%>

Related Content

  • Vendeka seeks expansion after European passive RFID-based tolling project
    October 24, 2012
    Turkish company Vendeka is looking to expand its operations internationally after completing what it describes as the first passive RFID-based tolling project in Europe. The company installed the system on the Bosphorus Bridge, which links Europe and Asia. Previously, tolling was achieved by a card-based system, but traffic jams were caused by drivers stopping to place their cards in the readers. This has been replaced by Vendeka’s passive RFID system. A major advantage, says Vendeka, is that a passive RFID
  • Self-propelled road marking, lines or beads
    February 26, 2014
    Belgian company Graco, a specialist in advanced airless striping solutions, will be at Intertraffic Amsterdam 2014 to launch the LineLazer IV 250DC, which the company says is the first stand-on self-propelled striper in the market for multi-colour road markings. Modularity is one of its main advantages. A complete pressurised bead system can be added to the unit to achieve ultimate retroreflection, while the unit can also be expanded with bead tanks, bead guns and spray guns, providing more capacity and the
  • Arada thinks small is better
    May 22, 2012
    In an effort to break stagnation in the DSRC market, Arada Systems has developed a DSRC radio that can plug into any device with a USB port. The idea is that USB will help proliferate DSRC and drive down pricing, leading to a wave of new applications and innovation.
  • Wide range of cameras from SVS-Vistek
    October 28, 2014
    German company SVS-Vistek designs and manufactures a wide range of innovative CCD and CMOS cameras, from VGA up to 29 megapixel resolution, for many industrial machine vision and traffic applications.