h a l f b a k e r yI didn't say you were on to something, I said you were on something.
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I don't think this would be easy to do and seems a bit Irish anyhow. I find that credit cards work perfectly for years if you treat 'em right. |
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More and more card applications are moving to contactless chips now, so mag strips are going to be pretty much redundant before long. |
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I guess I mean "non-optimal in the logic department". No offence meant - I'm pairt oirish meself. |
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// I don't think this would be easy to do and seems a bit Irish anyhow. I find that credit cards work perfectly for years if you treat 'em right. // |
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You lie, hu-mon ! Mine "swipe out" in just a few months ...... |
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Maybe there could be a little pattern of holes punched through the raised numbers that could be read by an optical scanner. |
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NB Category suggestion - "Public: Money" ? |
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As [waugs] pointed out, the mag strip contains more than just the card number. What problem are we trying to solve here? If it's worn-out mag strips, you can forget any method of reading the embossed numbers. The (baked) solution is to put the mag-strip's data in a chip. |
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Hey, hey, hey, we aren't trying to read all the data on the magnetic strip - there is about 2k bits on that - enough for a small JPEG of the user on that, or a good compressed signature. Just the raised numbers that the cards already have, which is what people type in anyway. |
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That's the way it used to be done |
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