Optical Mice Used To Detect Counterfeit Coins
JimXugle writes "El Mundo reports that Spanish researchers at The University of Lleida have used a modified optical mouse to detect counterfeit €2 coins (Original article, in Spanish) with a success rate comparable to that of an expert trained to do so. Details are to be published freely in the journal Sensors."
The laser from the mouse will heat up the chocolate inside of counterfeit coins, thus exposing the fakes and creating a mess.
Geesh, can you get me a mouse that detects North Korean bogus US$100 bills?
Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
In what ways does it defer, if any, from the techniques used in vending machines?
If it's better, patent and sell to vending companies? Yeah... patents are evil; but maybe a novel application of an existing technology isn't so evil in this case--provided it really is novel and not just a poor-man's vending machine detector, in which case the vending machine companies may already have a patent on it...
For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
You could also try not missing the point. Or the the part of the summary that says "with a success rate comparable to that of an expert. Or the point, that being that sensors are cheaper and generally more easily employable than people.
The stories and info posted here are artistic works of fiction and falsehood.
Only fools would take it as fact.
Did you know that there are more than 260 different euro coins from 19 countries to present day!
generally more easily employable than people.
And haven't formed labor unions. ;)
I've got a bunch of 1,8 coins I need to get rid of.
Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
If you compare a counterfeit-coin-detecting expert with a purpose-built handheld device, the answer is pretty obvious.
Until the day the people who print counterfeit coins buy a purpose-built handheld device, of course, and there's no expert around to reprogram the device because he jumped off a bridge after losing his job.
counterfeit coins? i am not a counterfeiter but if i was going to counterfeit any form of currency i would do 20s 50s & 100s US dollar bills, a lot of work goes in to making them so i figure if i was to go in to that sort of criminal activity it would be the denominations that brought the best return
Politics is Treachery, Religion is Brainwashing
Somehow I doubt a 16x16 pixel grayscale sensor is going to detect counterfeit coins any better than the human eye, but maybe I should read TFA before I jump to judgement...
And maybe before posting, too? Just a suggestion.
Generally, if you're about to post something that is along the lines of, "this couldn't possibly work because ..." without (a) having read the article, and (b) being an expert in the field, best to think twice.
Put my fist through my alarm clock with its ding-dong death inside my ear. - The Blackjacks.
Perhaps that's why it can never surpass what an expert can do. Realistically, you can't train it on just freshly stamped coins, nor can you really be 100% certain that a coin that has been circulated is genuine.
Every year here in Canada we mint a 50-cent coin. I almost never see one outside of a collector's set, however. In fact, it's so unusual to see one in circulation I've seen cashiers refuse to believe they are real money.
Ironically, US coins are widely accepted in Canada. There are so many US pennies in any random pile of "Canadian" pennies that no one could be bothered to sort them out.
Also, although US dollars trade for more than Canadian dollars, it's not possible to obtain an exchange rate for coinage. The only way to cash in on those marginally more valuable US coins floating around is to take then down to the US and spend them there.
A bit of trivia that few people know is that Canadian and US coins "flip" differently. That is to say, if you orient the "heads" side of a coin like a portrait and want to see the reverse side correctly oriented, you would flip a Canadian coin about the "Y" axis, but flip a US coin about the "X" axis. Otherwise the reverse side will appear upside down.
And haven't formed labor unions.
Have you not heard of the International Brotherhood of Laser Devices? Silly human; you will be among the first to bow down to your coherent light overlords.
This ain't rocket surgery.
Ah... so the sharks are just minions for the lasers!
Cleverly disguised as a responsible adult.
There are not 260 'different' coins. Each state just changes the picture of the coins (except 1€ coin), but coins are still made the same way, materials, size, weight are equal in each country. That leaves just with 8 different coins if my memory doesn't fail me... 1,2,5,10,20 and 50 cents and 1 and 2€...
Each state just changes the picture of the coins (except 1€ coin)
1€ coins also have different "picture" (i.e., national) sides: http://www.ecb.int/euro/coins/1euro/html/index.en.html
Grats! The whole article was a lie, and you were the FIRST ONE to figure it out! Here's a million internet-dollars! YAAAY!
P.S. ...' without (a) having read the article, and (b) being an expert in the field" is a parenthetical; the main clause is "Generally [it's] best to think twice" (there's that missing word).
He has just as many commas as he needs, though one is off by a few words and he left out a word. Protip: "if you're about to post something that is along the lines of, 'this couldn't possibly work because
It is fairly "easy" to pass off a variety of Egyptian currency as euros - while certainly something to be avoided, the 2 euro coin is very similar to an egyptian coin of ... I think... 30 euro cents value. I am not quite sure why anyone would want to go about counterfeiting anything of such low value unless they wanted to get their coke machine cokes for 30 cents as opposed to 1-2 euro. Add on the cost of getting caught and thrown in prison on whatever the European equivalent of felony charges is and...
Sure would be nice to see this for US paper currency. Many cash registers are PC based at the motherboard level, and could support an optical mouse just fine. What a great bit of Open Source software it would be to create and release a program people could run in business, etc.