- February 01, 2010
- Schneider Electric
February 1, 2010 Schneider Electric announced Harmony, which uses biometric fingerprint-recognition technology to grant employee access to sensitive areas and machine functions. Harmony fingerprint-reading device is designed specifically for industrial environments where security is highly critical to everyday functions, but manufacturing conditions require security systems to be industrially hardened. The Harmony Biometric Switch reads fingerprint patterns to verify that someone is authorized to access sensitive areas and machine functions through an anonymous process in which fingerprints serve only to authorize access, not confirm an individuals identity. Fingerprint readers have been shown to be more effective and efficient than other security systems, and they can also save money long-term. Fingerprint readers unlike passwords, swipe cards or pin numbers cant be lost, stolen, borrowed, guessed or forgotten. Industry experts estimate that up to 40 percent of all calls to IT help desks stem from password problems, and the average cost of each call ranges from $10 to $31. Simliar to a key operated selector switch the Harmony Biometric Switch has two operating modes: on-off mode or pulse mode for momentary action. Authentication takes less than one second, and the false acceptance rate is less than 0.1 percent. The switches can remember up to 200 fingerprints, including several fingers from the same operator, for additional flexibility and precision. This new switch fits in a standard 22mm push button mounting hole, resists mechanical shock and vibration, protects against EMC noise and UV light, meets IP65 and NEMA 12 standards, and offers an optional protective cover and guard. The switch is designed for areas of a plant with strict access restrictions, such as:
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