Home

 

Who we are

  Overview
  Vision & Mission
  The Clients
  News & Events
  Careers

Featured Clients

News & Events



Services

  Corporate Identity
  Trademark Registration
  Web Design
  Web Applications
  Desktop Applications
  Content Management
  Web Maintenance
  Domain Names
  Web Hosting
  E-Commerce
  Database Driven Portal
  Interactive Media
  Digital Photo Shooting
  Custom Built Solutions
  News RSS Feed


Access Controls
  Biometric Finger Print
  Payroll Systems
  Time Attendance
  Wireless Devices


Contact

PORTFOLIOMAN
www.portfolioman.com
ph: +62.21.58304509
fax:+62.21.58304509

Submit your request
Our Location

Our Data Center

Portfolioman - Data Center

Mobile Applications

Portfolioman - Data Center
Portfolioman - Mobile Applications

Download PDF

Download Brochures
Download Brochures

Partners

Portfolioman.com

Biometric Finger Print

Biometric Finger Print

We at Portfolioman helps our customers design and develop valuable, usable and better services.Our Biometric Finger Print Applications can be customized to customer unique requirements, all the way down to the individual user, who can easily manage his or her workspace for maximum productivity. Create a seamless flow of data from the Time & Attendance module into payroll using our Biometric Finger Print. We built and develop our own software to help our clients reach their goal.

Feel free to contact our customer services for more detail informations

 
Portfolioman Digital Photography
 

Time Attendance Biometric Fingerprint

We provide a total solutions of
:

- Biometric Fingerprint
- Payroll Systems
- Time Attendance
- Wireless Device

With our biometric fingerprint you can efficiently process all time data – just as your working time model requires. Data can also be transferred to your payroll system. This solution can be used either individually or linked with access control.

This ensures maximum flexibility and productivity, and the versatile evaluation options also provide valuable management information.

Your advantages at a glance

* Improve efficiency
* Heighten flexibility
* Enhance productivity
* Ensure security

 

Specification

     

Communication

:

 USB

Compatible

:

 USB  2.0. (Full Speed)

Specifications Pixel Resolution

:

 512 dpi

 Area at Center

:

 14.2 mm (width) x 18.4 cm (length)

 Supply Voltage

:

 5.0V +/- supplied by USB

 Supply Current

:

 190mA (scanning),140mA (idle),150mA (suspend)

 Scan data

:

 8 bit gray scale

 Finger Captured

:

 360 rotation

 Size

:

 81.4 mm x 49.5 mm x 20.5 mm

 Operating Temperature

:

 0o - 40oC

 Operating Humidity

:

 20-80%

 
 

 Specification

     

 User Capacity

:

 1.800 records

 Log Buffer

:

 80.000 Logs

 Authentication Method

:

 1:1, 1:N

 Function Keys

:

 4

 ID digit length

:

 9

 Identification (1:N) time

:

 1.4 second

 Verification (1:1) time

:

 1 second

 Communication

:

 RS 232, RS 485, modem (optional)

 Sensor

:

 Coated or Uncoated Optical

 FAR

:

 0.0001%

 FRR

:

 0.1%

 Power Operating

:

 5V/400mA

 Temperature

:

 0o - 45o C

 Humidity

:

 20-80%

 Size

:

 19 x 14 x 5 cm

   
 

Biometrics Basic 101

With Material From - The Biometrics Consortium (http://www.biometrics.org)

The Biometric Consortium's charter was formally approved on December 7, 1995, by the Facilities Protection Committee, a committee that reports to the Security Policy Board through the Security Policy Forum.

The Security Policy Board was established by Presidential Decision Directive/NSC-29 on September 16, 1994, for the coordination, formulation, evaluation, and oversight of US national security policy. The Security Policy Board reports to the Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs.

"Biometrics are automated methods of recognizing a person based on a physiological or behavioral characteristic."

Examples of human traits used for biometric recognition include fingerprints, speech, face, retina, iris, handwritten signature, hand geometry, and wrist veins.

Biometric recognition can be used in identification mode, where the biometric system identifies a person from the entire enrolled population by searching a database for a match.

A system also can be used in verification mode, where the biometric system authenticates a person's claimed identity from his/her previously enrolled pattern.

Using biometrics for identifying and authenticating human beings offers some unique advantages. Only biometric authentication bases an identification on an intrinsic part of a human being. Tokens, such as magnetic stripe cards, physical keys, and so forth, can be lost, stolen, duplicated, or left at home. Passwords can be forgotten, shared, or observed.

While all biometric systems have their own advantages and disadvantages, there are some common characteristics needed to make a biometric system usable.

First, the biometric must be based upon a distinguishable trait. For example, for nearly a century, law enforcement has used fingerprints to identify people. There is a great deal of scientific data supporting the idea that "no two fingerprints are alike."

Newer methods, even those with a great deal of scientific support, such as DNA-based genetic matching, sometimes do not hold up in court.

Another key aspect is how user-friendly is the system? Most people find it acceptable to have their pictures taken by video cameras or to speak into a microphone. In the United States, using a fingerprint sensor does not seem to be much of a problem. In some other countries, however, there is strong cultural opposition to touching something that has been touched by many other people.

While cost is always a concern, most implementers today are sophisticated enough to understand that it is not only the initial cost of the sensor or the matching software that is involved. Often, the life-cycle support cost of providing system administration support and an enrollment operator can overtake the initial cost of the hardware. Also of key importance is accuracy. Some terms that are used to describe the accuracy of biometric systems include false-acceptance rate (percentage of impostors accepted), false-rejection rate (percentage of authorized users rejected), and equal-error rate (when the decision threshold is adjusted so that the false- acceptance rate equals the false-rejection rate).

When discussing the accuracy of a biometric system, it is often beneficial to talk about the equal-error rate or at least to consider the false-acceptance rate and false-rejection rate together. For many systems, the threshold can be adjusted to ensure that virtually no impostors will be accepted. Unfortunately, this often means an unreasonably high number of authorized users will be rejected.

To summarize, a good biometric system is one that is low cost, fast, accurate, and easy to use."

We at Portfolioman believe our solutions are among the best in the industry. A special emphasis of our company’s vision is the utilization of advanced biometric technology to increase the security of our clients’ homes, workplaces, networks and data.

Feel free to contact our customer services for more detail informations

 

Portfolioman - Data Center
 
Copyright © 2004· 2006. All Rights Reserved |Portfolioman | PT. Inmac Sejahtera
www.portfolioman.com | info@portfolioman.com | Phone. +62-21-58304509 | Fax. +62-21-58304509