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Home  > Computers and Information Technology  >  IT Administration & Services  >  Smart Cards

NFC-Enabled Phones and Contactless Smart Cards 2008-2018


Published Date: May 2008
Published By: IDTechEx Ltd
Page Count: 207
Order Code: R449-77
 
DescriptionTable of ContentsSimilar
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1. INTRODUCTION
1.1. RFID and its new forms
1.2. Contactless smart cards and tickets
1.2.1. Contactless smart cards
1.2.2. Late adoption
1.2.3. Memory chip vs microprocessor
1.2.4. Compatibility
1.2.5. Dual interface smart cards
1.2.6. Privacy and security
1.2.7. Secure access cards
1.2.8. Contactless smart tickets
1.3. Near Field Communication (NFC)
1.3.1. RFID enabled phones are not all NFC
1.4. Effect of cards/ tickets competing with NFC
2. TECHNOLOGIES FOR CONTACTLESS CARDS AND TICKETS
2.1. Manufacturing value chain
2.2. Choice of frequency
2.3. Card technology
2.4. Chip choices and designs
2.4.1. Chip types
2.4.2. Chip circuit and security
2.4.3. Cost structure
2.4.4. Battery assisted cards
2.5. Contactless ticket technology
3. CONTACTLESS SMART CARDS IN ACTION
3.1. Anatomy of 105 transport schemes worldwide
3.2. Stored Value Cards (SVC) for transport
3.2.1. Paybacks
3.3. SVC cards and RFID phones for general cash replacement - Japan in the lead
3.3.1. Huge opportunity to replace cash
3.3.2. JR East Suica and its many partners
3.3.3. Edy electronic purse, Japan
3.3.4. Incompatibility of other schemes
3.3.5. Universal readers begin to appear
3.4. Major card schemes in China
3.4.1. China National ID card
3.4.2. Golden Card Project/ RFID Alliance/ Pilots and funding China
3.4.3. The Yikatong card China
3.4.4. Hong Kong Octopus China
3.4.5. City cards in China
3.4.6. Student cards China
3.5. Transport cards worldwide - examples
3.5.1. Washington WMATA
3.5.2. Atlanta MARTA Breeze card and tickets
3.5.3. London Oyster UK
3.5.4. Kanto Japan
3.5.5. Osaka-Kobe-Kyoto Japan
3.5.6. Qingdao China
3.5.7. Seoul Korea, U-City, Digital Media City, etc
3.5.8. EasyFuelTM Peru
3.6. Secure access cards worldwide - examples
3.6.1. Introduction
3.6.2. Minneapolis St Paul Airport USA
3.6.3. China secure access
3.6.4. Paybacks
3.7. The move to RFID bank cards
3.8. Bank credit, debit, account and SVC cards
3.8.1. Bank cards for transport? A problem of what they charge operators
3.8.2. Bank cards for transport? A problem of speed
3.8.3. Visa gets faster
3.8.4. MasterCard gets faster - UK trial
3.8.5. MasterCard PayPass on New York Mass Transit
3.8.6. Paybacks
3.9. Contactless smart tickets in action
3.9.1. China National Railway System
3.9.2. Aichi World EXPO 2005 Japan
3.9.3. Buses Portugal and Norway
4. STANDARDS
4.1. Introduction
4.2. RFID card and ticket standards
4.3. Move to contactless EMV
4.4. NFC standards
5. NFC IN ACTION
5.1. Introduction
5.1.1. Origin of NFC
5.1.2. RFID enabled mobile phones
5.1.3. Business cases - fighting for position
5.1.4. Standards
5.1.5. Swiss Army Knife?
5.2. Transport led case studies
5.2.1. Mobile Suica, Japan
5.2.2. Hanau, Germany
5.2.3. Rhein Main Verkehrsverbund (RMV)
5.2.4. Xiamen, China
5.2.5. Chungwa Telecom, Taiwan
5.2.6. BART, San Francisco
5.2.7. RATP, Paris
5.2.8. Other French Transport Schemes - Marseille, Bordeaux
5.3. Payment led case studies
5.3.1. Caen, France
5.3.2. Payez Mobile
5.3.3. bitWallet Japan
5.3.4. O2 Wallet, UK
5.3.5. Royal Bank of Canada, Visa
5.3.6. Taiwan Mobile
5.3.7. Spokane, Washington, USA
5.3.8. Melbourne, Australia
5.3.9. Commonwealth Bank, MasterCard, Australia
5.3.10. Singapore
5.3.11. Netherlands, Payter
5.3.12. UnionPay and other NFC trials in China
5.3.13. Philips Arena, Atlanta USA
5.3.14. MasterCard, Dallas, USA
5.3.15. Discover, Motorola - Chicago and Salt Lake City
5.3.16. C1000, Netherlands
5.3.17. People's Bank, Georgia
5.3.18. Garanti Bank, Turkey
5.4. Access led case studies
5.4.1. Upper Austria University of Applied Sciences
5.4.2. O2 Wireless Festival, UK
5.4.3. Manchester City FC, UK
5.4.4. Farglory, Taiwan
5.5. Service delivery led case studies
5.5.1. Home Care Providers, UK
5.5.2. SmartTouch, Oulu, Finland
5.5.3. CarePro, UK
5.5.4. Finnair Airlines, Helsinki-Vantaa Airport, Finland
5.5.5. Home Health Care, Netherlands
5.6. Other applications
5.6.1. Health Buddy
5.6.2. Vehicle Identification
5.6.3. Hi Honey, I'm Home
6. CONTACTLESS CARDS VS NFC
6.1. Cash, bank card and phone payment compete
6.2. Merits of contactless cards vs RFID enabled phones
6.2.1. A skeptic's view
6.2.2. The IDTechEx assessment
6.3. Consumer response - say one thing, do another?
6.4. Contactless card companies enter NFC
6.5. Service providers and phone manufacturers fight for share
6.6. Bouygues Telecom agrees
6.7. GSM Association wades in
7. MARKET FORECASTS 2008-2018
7.1. Contactless smart card projections
7.1.1. Projections 2008-2018 by number, unit price, value
7.1.2. Financial and multifunctional cards
7.1.3. China National ID card
7.1.4. Other national ID cards
7.1.5. Transport cards
7.1.6. Secure access and other card applications
7.2. Contactless smart ticket projections
7.3. Forecasts for HF readers for cards and tickets
7.3.1. Readers for financial cards in the US
7.4. Memory vs microprocessor card chip projections
7.4.2. Memory chip cards and tickets
7.4.3. Microprocessors
7.4.4. League table of RFID chip suppliers
7.4.5. Contactless cards as a percentage of all smart cards
7.5. NFC phones
7.5.2. RFID enabled phone sales by region 2008-2018
7.6. Size of the opportunity to replace cash
7.7. The prepaid card opportunity
APPENDIX 1: IDTECHEX PUBLICATIONS
APPENDIX 2: GLOSSARY


TABLES
1.1. Adoption of memory chip vs microprocessor cards by application.
3.1. Details of 105 projects involving contactless smart cards and tickets used for public transportation
3.2. Details of the China Natinoal ID card scheme
3.3. Speed of transaction for various conventional contactless card technologies
4.1. Details of 33 important published and emerging contactless card/ticket standards and their committees and statutes
4.2. Adoption of EMV smart cards for financial payments 2004-2006 in millions globally
5.1. Comparison of economic options for RFID enabled phones
6.1. The good and bad of contactless cards and tickets vs RFID enabled phones
7.1. Global market for contactless cards number millions 2008-2018
7.2. Global market for contactless cards unit price US dollars 2008-2018
7.3. Global market for contactless cards dollars millions 2008-2018
7.4. Global market for contactless cards and their systems US dollars million 2008-2018
7.5. Contactless tickets number and unit value 2008-2018
7.6. Total value of tickets and their systems US dollars million 2008-2018
7.7. Typical contactless card and ticket price list in 2006
7.8. Global market for financial contactless cards 2008-2018
7.9. Characteristics of financial market for contactless cards 2008-2018
7.10. Issuance of the Chinese National Identification card 2004-2006 and cumulative national target for 2008
7.11. Global market for China National ID cards 2008-2018
7.12. Characteristics of market for China ID card 2008-2018
7.13. Global market for other national ID cards 2008-2018
7.14. Global market for transport contactless cards 2008-2018
7.15. Characteristics of market for contactless transport cards 2008-2018
7.16. Largest contactless card schemes for transport with installed population of cards
7.17. Global market for security and other contactless cards 2008-2018
7.18. Characteristics of market for contactless secure access and other cards 2008-2018
7.19. Global market for contactless smart tickets 2008-2018
7.20. Characteristics of the contactless smart ticket market 2008-2018
7.21. Largest orders placed for contactless tickets 2004-2006
7.22. Forecast for HF reader sales 2008-2018
7.23. Largest suppliers of RFID chips at start of 2006 and 2007 by cumulative number sold in millions
7.24. Contactless and dual interface chips as a percentage of all card chips 2000, 2008, 2018
7.25. Global shipments of NFC enabled phones in millions 2008-2018
7.26. Numbers of NFC phones by region 2008-2018 in millions
7.27. Value of the potential global market for prepaid card payment volume in 2010


FIGURES
1.1. Security and memory for different shapes of RFID tag vs cost. Cards red, tickets blue, labels yellow
1.2. Range vs memory of various shapes and applications of RFID tags to different specifications
2.1. Manufacturing value chain for contactless cards and tickets
2.2. Frequencies - the good things
2.3. Frequencies - the bad things
2.4. Reverse of Omron HF contactless smart card showing copper etched antenna and chip assembly.
2.5. Reverse of an Exypnotech HF inlet showing etched aluminium antenna
2.6. Optimal printing technology for RFID antennas as a function of output.
2.7. Circuit block diagram of a microprocessor chip used in smart cards
2.8. Contactless system environment
2.9. Primary elements of the cost of a passive contactless smart card and what influences them
2.10. Relative costs of different antenna deposition technologies according to Infineon.
2.11. Time temperature recording HF RFID card from KSW Microtec with its inlet
2.12. Aveso laminate giving display capability to contactless smart cards.
2.13. Types of active RFID compared with passive RFID
2.14. An HF smart label or ticket from Hyan Label of China where the antenna is printed straight onto the paper label feedstock.
3.1. A token from Guangzhou in China
3.2. Shanghai public transport card
3.3. The Atlanta MARTA Breeze card
3.4. MARTA card operated gate
3.5. Mu Solutions RFID tag in admission ticket
3.6. Admission solution for Aichi World EXPO 2005
5.1. NFC board for mobile phone
5.2. The ability to conduct transactions at any time or place
5.3. NFC enabled phones pay bus fares in Hanau
5.4. NFC enabled mobile phones in Xiamen
5.5. Mobile phones in Taiwan
5.6. The Netherlands is an active market for NFC
6.1. Comparison of value of individual payments by cash, debit/credit card and mobile phone
7.1. Global market for contactless cards number millions 2008-2018
7.2. Global market for contactless cards unit price US dollars 2008-2018
7.3. Global market for contactless cards and tickets number millions 2008-2018
7.4. Global market for contactless cards and systems US dollars million 2008-2018
7.5. Total value of tickets and systems US dollars million 2008-2018
7.6. Historical trend of the mix of chip types for smart cards of all kinds 2000-2006, excluding China ID card
7.7. Contactless and dual interface chips as a percentage of all card chips 2000, 2008, 2018
7.8. Numbers of NFC phones by region 2008-2018 in millions

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