Books : Smart Cards : A Guide to Building and Managing Smart Card Applications

In association with Amazon.com
 View Shopping Cart or Checkout 

Author name: J. Thomas Monk, Henry N. Dreifus

Books : Smart Cards : A Guide to Building and Managing Smart Card Applications
View Bigger Picture

Regular marked price: $49.99
Discount Price: $35.78
Cost Savings: $14.21 (28%)
Price fluctuation possible.

Used Price: $0.52
Third Party New Price: $23.55


How soon does it ship: Normal ship time within one day



Shipping? Absolutely FREE if you qualify for Super Saver Shipping.
Type of bind: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 006
EAN num: 9780471157489
ISBN number: 0471157481
Label: Wiley
Manufacturer: Wiley
Quantity: 1
Page Count: 352
Printing Date: December 24, 1997
Publishing house: Wiley
Sale Popularity Level: 1192920
Studio: Wiley




Other books you might be interested in perusing:

Editor's Notes and Comments:

Product Description:
A complete nuts-and-bolts guide to designing, building, and managing the smart card system that's right for your company

Already a well-established medium of exchange in Europe, smart card technology has made major inroads in the North American market in the past few years. Visa and Mastercard are committed to replacing credit cards with them over the subsequent five years, and Microsoft is racing to use them for e-commerce. Clearly, the time for asking 'Why?' regarding smart cards has passed. The important question companies now should be asking themselves is 'How?': how to plan, how to develop, how to implement, and how to manage the smart card system that is right for our company? This book provides complete, unbiased answers to these and all your technical and business questions about smart card systems.

Dreifus and Monk guide you step-by-step through the entire process of selecting, designing, building, and managing a smart card application tailored to your business. They supply numerous checklists to help guarantee that you make the correct technical decisions during each phase of the process. And they include real-world case studies illustrating successful smart card implementations in a variety of industries, including banking, manufacturing, entertainment, healthcare, and transportation. Crucial topics covered in detail include:
* Smart card architectures and standards
* Security and encryption
* Smart card operating systems
* Smart card application design and development
* Development tools
* Testing and certification

Smart Cards arms you with everything you need to know to make informed decisions about the smart card system that's right for your company.



Customer Reviews
User popularity level:  out of 5 stars

Rated by buyers 1 out of 5 stars - Proven irrelevant
Well, now it's 2002, and the the revolution has definitely not been televised. We've heard now from authors like these guys for about, oh, 10 years or so that smart cards are the subsequent revolution. That it's just a matter of time before mag stripe cards are swept aside in this tidal wave of new technology.

Friends, it just ain't gonna happen here in the States. Despite massive attempts by GemPlus and other 'leaders' described in this book, the entire thing has been just one more marketing-driven endeavor to force unneeded technology on the masses. The dog didn't hunt, and these 'visionaries' are now unwinding all their efforts here, sending thousands of programmers out on to the streets.

This thinly veiled advertisement, with very poor design and little original content, has suffered the ultimate indignity: history has rendered it all but irrelevant.



Rated by buyers 1 out of 5 stars - Waste of time and money
I bought this book hoping it would give some ideas on how smart card technology may offer new business opportunities for my software development company, but found nothing of the sort. I have not found an answer to a single question I had, for that matter. The laguage is horrible, information is presented poorly, lots of totally useless details and almost nothing on the subject I was mostly interested in: how (and why) a company would embrace this tachnology to make money.



Rated by buyers 1 out of 5 stars - Informercial, don't buy it.
Very disappointing. I am 75% through this book and struggling to finish it. Whilst the book has some good information (smart card lingo, players in the industry, trends...etc) most are useless because the materials are so badly organised. Filling up the book with charts, diagrams and detailed reference tables of smart card standards does NOT make it a useful book, all are illrelevant without much deeper explanation. Remember when you were in high school, you copied a few paragraphs from one book and a few from an other to "write" an essay --- it reads just like that, very amateurish. A lot of the so called "case study" blah about how good/bad the technology is, but no details. It's an informercial.... "Buy my stuff, and I'm going to make you lots of money. This man with only a high school education bought my tape barely over 3 weeks and he is now making $5000 a week,....blah, blah, blah".... where is the bloody proof ?! It's a damn Tuesday night informercial. Oh, I actually work for a smart card company so I may be bias. Amazon should introduce half a point, this book is a bit below 1.



Rated by buyers 1 out of 5 stars - Superficial not Smart
After reading this book I wasn't any smarter about smart cards. The charts and the introduction made me buy the book. But actually the book is very superficial. There is no real structure or framework that organizes the content. OK, there are chapters, but often it isn't at all clear why certain information is presented in a certain chapter. Also, it is not really clear how the different chapters are distinguished. The title of a chapter usually doesn't help you. Several pieces of information are presented over and over again in different chapters. Most of the information presented is common sense or well known software engineering principles. The information specific to smart cards is limited and not very detailed. Sometimes one could get the feeling that even the authors didn't really know more than the superficial information they present. A coworker of mine uses the term "consultant speak" for that kind of style. The charts and graphic are almost exclusively from other sources and not genuine to the book. They are usually only remotely related to what is discussed in the text and the authors don't bother explaining any of them. The case studies are not what you would normally expect from a case studies. They briefly mention a particular smart card project but don't really go into any details about technology or why certain design decisions were made. Most of the information given in the case study chapters is applicable to any kind of IT project. The check lists are pure common sense and sometimes unintentionally humorous. To sum it up: The book is easy to read but if you are serious about learning about smart cards, it doesn't help you at all. The claim to guide you through the whole process of a smart card project is a gross exaggeration. If you don't already know most of what you need to know from other sources, relying on this book alone will most likely make your project fail. The smart card specific information in the book could have easily been compressed into a nice 10 page white paper.



Rated by buyers 1 out of 5 stars - Don't Bother!!!
I have read this book and think it is useless. The author is very hard to understand and the technology is poorly explained.

see more


Find other books like this one:

 


Photos Psoriasis / Stress Beating / Typee: A Romance Of The South Seas / Barlasch Of The Guard / Youth Fiction /
Gift For Him And Her Cookie Wedding Favors Buy Corporate Gift Picture From The Wizard Of Oz Arabic Language Autism Magnet Sherlock Holmes Baker Street Sherlock Holmes Gifts Graduation Gift Personalized Kids Novels Book Jungle Panther

Home - Trains - Planes - Ships - Transportation