I'm sorry. What problem are we trying to solve again?
I thought we were talking about simply removing email addresses from
the blue sheets, but it seems we're talking about something entirely
different.
Thanks,
-drc
On Apr 4, 2008, at 2:11 PM, Bill Manning wrote:
WIDE camps have done the RFID thing for several years now.
--bill
On Fri, Apr 04, 2008 at 11:35:12AM -0400, Henning Schulzrinne wrote:
The registration database for each IETF meeting already contains
email
addresses of all attendees, presumably a superset of the blue-sheet
signers.
More technologically-advanced conferences and trade-shows use RFID or
(a few years ago) mag stripes to avoid deciphering handwriting. The
per-card cost is modest and since there are a lot of repeat
attendees,
we all just need our IETF "frequent flyer card". We used something
like that for speaker identification at the microphone at ACM
Multimedia 2004; the microphone had a BlueTooth-enabled RFID reader
that transmitted the code to a data gathering host, which then
displayed name and affiliation on a screen. The range of the card was
a few inches.
Henning
On Apr 4, 2008, at 11:01 AM, Mr Kim Sanders wrote:
- If there were a database with everyone on file .
- If each person were assigned a permanent identity code .
- If block l(i.e. disconnected) letters were required .
- If persons designated as having legible handwriting wrote
everything but
the signature .
/Kim
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--
--bill
Opinions expressed may not even be mine by the time you read them, and
certainly don't reflect those of any other entity (legal or
otherwise).
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