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IBM Smart Card OS On A 1MB Smart Card

michaelpapet.com writes "IBM has ported/developed their Javacard smart card operating system for Sharp's 1MB smart card. Read Sharp's announcement here. Interesting features include: AES encryption; elliptical curve encryption; and 1MB of storage. Sharp's smart card package claims to be almost as small as a normal smart card package. In an industry that can considers 64K of memory a luxury, 1MB is staggering. Read Sharp's original 1MB smart card announcement here. Is this a 'Build it and they will come...' kind of solution? How small is an 'almost as small' smart card IC package?"

5 of 128 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Storage space by AndroidCat · · Score: 3, Informative

    Think of as a 1M hard drive. The card also has a dinky 8K RAM and 8K ROM. (Note that the press release for the card is a year old.)

    --
    One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
  2. Re:Storage space by John+Harrison · · Score: 5, Informative
    I work for IBM with smart cards. My team directect Sharp the the JCOP (Java Card Open Platform) operating system over a year ago. The 1MB is rewritable storage. The OS is stored in ROM. It is a simplified version of Java (the JavaCard standard) that requires very little in the way of resources.

    Functionality is added to the card by securely loading JavaCard applets to the 1MB of storage. More info on JCOP can be found here.

  3. The 20 Year Cycle by Etcetera · · Score: 4, Informative


    20 years ago, Apple was figuring out how to squeeze a graphical operating system into 128K of RAM. Permanent storage that didn't cost 5 figures was in the 400K range.

    In this day of multi-gigabyte OS installs, it's refreshing to see people return to the "lean and mean" OS mentality, even if it's out of necessity. Hell, even 10 years ago, you could still install an entire installation of Mac OS 7.6 on a set of 10-12 floppies.

    Those were the days. Nice to see such "hack"ish talent used again.

  4. Just a bunch more Flash by nervesystem · · Score: 3, Informative

    This is really just about adding high density flash to an existing smart card platform. Other then having alot of flash this (16 bit CPU, 4-8K RAM) card is just like most other JavaCards out there (such as in your cell phone or AMEX Blue card). The innovative smart cards these days have 32 bit CPUs such as the P9SC648 from Philips and ST22N256 from ST Micro. The Philips card is alot more powerful then IBM/Sharp's card and still has 512 KB Flash. The ST card has 256 KB Flash and 368 ROM and is shipping now for $4 to $5 in quantity.

  5. Here is the confusion by GoClick · · Score: 4, Informative

    The confusion here is that the average /.er doesn't know that a SmartCard is not a SmartMedia Card.

    A SmartCard is NOT for holding pictures of your cat. It's primarily for identity verification. See
    SmartCard

    A SmartMedia Card IS for storing pictures of your cat or whatever else you might have. This is the large card that goes in SOME digital cameras. SmartMedia is a trademark of Toshiba. It is a flash memory format Please see
    SmartMedia