Bill Gates may be one of the smartest guys in the country, but even
he’s annoyed at having to remember a lot of personal passwords for
activities like withdrawing money and going online. He also thinks
they’re secure. At last week’s Comdex computer convention in Las 【M1】__________
Vegas, the Microsoft CEO railed the password as a “weak link”. One of 【M2】__________
his proposed solutions are biometrics, the measuring of unique 【M3】__________
characteristics like the fingerprint and the iris of the eye for the
purpose of verifying identification. 【M4】__________
That delighted about the dozen or so companies that brought biometric 【M5】__________
technology to Comdex. Mostly start-ups, they came to Vegas shopping
schemes to identify you in your hands, your eyes, your voice, even the 【M6】__________
way you type. “We want to see a biometrics row in every CompUSA,
right next to joysticks and printers,” says Kevin Corson of True Touch,
a maker of software that works with various forms of the technology.
Comdex attendants eagerly lined on at the counter of IriScan, a 【M7】_________
firm based in Marlton, N. J. , to hold a scanner—it looked a bit like a
hair dryer—about three inches from their eyes. The device works by
taking a video image of the iris, breaking the image into circular
frameworks and analyzed the unique patterns within each area. The 【M8】_________
company says there’s only a l-in-1078 chances that two people’s irises 【M9】_________
will match in its system.
A company called Identicator, in San Bruno, Calif. , is aiming a
little lower—at your forefingers. The company licenses its scanners to
Compaq and other companies, which combine them with keyboards and
mouses or sell them as $ 100 stand-alone units that you can put into your 【M10】_________
computer.
【M8】
analyzed—analyzing