Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
Tech

Smartphone Swipe To Unlock Your Suitcase

Darpan News Desk IANS, 05 Jan, 2015 01:35 PM
    US-based start-up Digipas has launched a "smart" lock that allows users to open or lock their luggage with just a swipe of their smartphone screens.
     
    Called eGeeTouch, the new lock could be a boon for travellers who have a tendency to misplace the keys to their suitcase locks or forget the passwords of conventional combination locks.
     
    With the new electronic lock, a tap of their NFC (Near Field Communications)-enabled smartphone, tablet or smartwatch could grant access to their luggage.
     
    NFC enables transfer of small amounts of data between two devices held a few centimetres from each other, but unlike Bluetooth, it requires no pairing code.
     
    "The world's first smart electronic lock is embedded with state-of-art intelligent access security and identification technologies, and resolve the disadvantages associated with using conventional mechanical locks," the company wrote on its website.
     
    "It requires no key to misplace, no tiny digit-wheel to dial, and no combination code to memorize, thus no fuss for asset owners to secure their personal belongings in luggage, lockers, gates, containers, storage room or cabinets," it added.
     
    What is more, eGeeTouch can also be accessed using a pre-paired NFC smart tag or sticker if the user does not have an NFC-enabled device, the website Mashable reported.
     
    The lock runs on the power of a battery which can be recharged via an external USB portable power source.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    NASA's Mars rover breaks off-Earth roving record

    NASA's Mars rover breaks off-Earth roving record
    NASA's Opportunity Mars rover that landed on the Red Planet in 2004 now holds the off-Earth roving distance record after trekking for 40 km....

    NASA's Mars rover breaks off-Earth roving record

    Wireless cooling: Magnets to keep your fridge cool

    Wireless cooling: Magnets to keep your fridge cool
    Magnets may soon act as wireless cooling agents for your refrigerators, laptops and other devices if a theory propounded by researchers at Massachusetts...

    Wireless cooling: Magnets to keep your fridge cool

    Human-induced water vapour next climate threat

    Human-induced water vapour next climate threat
    The rising levels of water vapour in the upper troposphere - a key amplifier of global warming - owing to greenhouse gases will intensify climate change...

    Human-induced water vapour next climate threat

    Facebook favoured for background check on prospective partner: Survey

    Facebook favoured for background check on prospective partner: Survey
    Almost fifty percent unmarried people in India use social networking site Facebook to conduct a background check on their prospective partner...

    Facebook favoured for background check on prospective partner: Survey

    2.5 bn smartphone users globally by 2015: US report

    2.5 bn smartphone users globally by 2015: US report
    Nearly 2.5 billion people or 35 percent of the global population is expected to use smartphones by the end of 2015, says the latest report of US-based industry...

    2.5 bn smartphone users globally by 2015: US report

    New technique to build 'invisible' materials with light

    New technique to build 'invisible' materials with light
    A new method of building materials using light could one day enable technologies that are often considered the realm of science fiction, such as invisibility ...

    New technique to build 'invisible' materials with light