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October 25, 2004

Near Field Communication - the new handshake
The handshake is an age-old custom. Some say that by showing your empty right hand, you were demonstrating that you did not have a weapon and that your intentions were friendly.

There's a new handshake coming in a year two from the nice people at Nokia, Sony, Philips and Texas Instruments. They are working on a new connectivity standard called, Near Field Communication (NFC). The promise of this new technology is truly cool they want to turn your mobile device (cell phone) into a touch-based transmitter. The idea is simple, so you know it's going to be good. Instead of trying to figure what network you're on (or near) you simply touch your cell phones together and they start to transfer information automatically like Vcards, or small bits of data. It could be a financial transaction or the transfer of a photograph between friends. The technology could be touch activated or, as the name suggests, just near field. Near, as in eight inches or so.

How cool would it be to walk up to a friend and touch cell phones to transfer an .mp3 file, new ring tone or wallpaper? Print a photo to a printer by putting your camera close to it? How much cooler would it be to walk out of the local 7/11 and check out by touching your cellphone to the cash-register, entering your pin and paying by your choice of debit, credit or phone bill? That's the promise of NFC, and a bunch of smart people are working on it right now. One pundit I spoke with envisions 50% of all handsets will be NFC enabled by 2009. For right now, a hearty handshake will have to do.
Posted by yatta at 04:32 PM


Comments

um, ever heard of bluetooth? don't have to touch the phones together, but if you really want to...

http://www.wasteofbrain.com

Posted by: idio at October 25, 2004 10:14 PM

I missed this comment last week...

I actually think that this is kinda interesting. It reintroduces real proximity back into media transactions.

you see.... that's just the problem: i just referred to interpersonal communication as a transaction. ;)

Posted by: yatta at November 2, 2004 12:15 PM

idio: touch is the entire point of this protocol: bringing back touch into these transactions brings back a whole world of interaction possibilities. One of the key ideas here is trust and accountability: actually touching two tags together has a whole different meaning to being inside a "aura" of broadcasted bluetooth.

Posted by: Timo at January 21, 2005 07:36 AM

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