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Smart Card Applications: Design models for using and programming smart cards
 
 
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Smart Card Applications: Design models for using and programming smart cards [Hardcover]

Wolfgang Rankl (Author), Kenneth Cox (Translator)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

June 19, 2007 047005882X 978-0470058824 1
A practical guide to the specification, design, and programming of smart card systems for working applications.

More than 3 billion smartcards are produced every year. Generally defined as any pocket-sized card with embedded integrated circuits or chips, they have a huge number of applications including travel cards, chip and pin cards, pet tags, mobile phone SIMs and pallet trackers. Now with modern Smart Card technology such as Java Card and Basic Card it is possible for everyone to create his or her own applications on a smart card.

This book provides generic solutions for programming smart cards, enabling the creation of working applications and systems.

Key features:

  • Presents a comprehensive introduction to the topic of smart cards, explaining component elements and the smart card microcontrollers.
  • Sets out information on operating systems with case studies of a range of applications including credit card security, mobile phones and transport payment cards.
  • Gives detailed advice on the monitoring of smart card applications, recognizing potential attacks on security and improving system integrity.
  • Provides modules and examples so that all types of systems can be built up from a small number of individual components.
  • Offers guidelines on avoiding and overcoming design errors.

Ideal for practising engineers and designers looking to implement smart cards in their business, it is also a valuable reference for postgraduate students taking courses on embedded system and smart card design.


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Smart Card Applications: Design models for using and programming smart cards + Smart Card Handbook + Java Card™ Technology for Smart Cards: Architecture and Programmer's Guide
Price For All Three: $237.18

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  • Smart Card Handbook $112.99

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"This book was a interesting read, and certainly provided as much information as is necessary to understand the inner workings of most smart-cards--as well as their world application." (Computing Reviews, February 1, 2008)

From the Back Cover

A practical guide to the specification, design, and programming of smart card systems for working applications.

More than 1 billion smartcards are produced every year. Generally defined as any pocket-sized card with embedded integrated circuits or chips, they have a huge number of applications including travel cards, chip and pin cards, pet tags, mobile phone SIMs and pallet trackers. Now with modern Smart Card technology such as Basic Card and Java Card it is possible for everyone to create his or her own applications on a smart card.

This book provides generic solutions for programming smart cards, enabling the creation of working applications and systems.

Key features:

  • Presents a comprehensive introduction to the topic of smart cards, explaining component elements and the smart card microcontrollers.
  • Sets out information on operating systems with case studies of a range of applications including credit card security, mobile phones and transport payment cards.
  • Gives detailed advice on the monitoring of smart card applications, recognizing potential attacks on security and improving system integrity.
  • Provides modules and examples so that all types of systems can be built up from a small number of individual components.
  • Offers guidelines on avoiding and overcoming design errors.

Ideal for practising engineers and designers looking to implement smart cards in their business, it is also a valuable reference for postgraduate students taking courses on embedded system and smart card design.


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 236 pages
  • Publisher: Wiley; 1 edition (June 19, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 047005882X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0470058824
  • Product Dimensions: 9.8 x 6.8 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.3 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,053,579 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A useful heads up for software developer, April 2, 2010
By 
Dmitry Dvoinikov (Ekaterinburg, Russia) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Smart Card Applications: Design models for using and programming smart cards (Hardcover)
This is the second book of the same author on the topic of smart cards that I had to read. The first was Smart Card Handbook. You have to give it to Mr. Rankl, he appears to have first-hand inside-out knowledge of building smart cards solutions.

This book covers smart card applications in "smart card-centric" manner. It explains how the smart cards work, how their file system works, what kind of objects are in there and how to manage them.

Is this knowledge useful for a software practitioner ? Generally, yes. But it's mostly valuable if you develop embedded applications i.e. JAVA applets to be downloaded to smart cards or even smart card OS modules. As you can see, embedded application developer thinks "from inside" the card. For an embedded application smart card is the real environment, smart card OS is the real OS and its files are the real files. And you don't need any APIs. Understanding smart card internals is all that is needed.

This is not the case with me. As a security application developer, I treat smart card as an external opaque cryptographic device. I'm more concerned about externally observable behaviour of smart cards, APIs to access them, differences and compatibility issues etc. The book gives nothing of the sort. At most, it gives pieces of PCSC-like API. No PKCS#11, no cryptography at all. No hands-on information for a programmer who thinks "from outside" the card.

The book also describes smart card usage patterns, examples, security threats, explains how to deploy smart card solutions in the field and what kind of problems to expect. This provides an interesting reading for a software developer, but again, only in perspective. This book may affect your high-level design decisions or deployment models, but it doesn't help much with programming smart cards.

A useful heads up for software developer.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
smart card operating system, implicit file selection, smart card commands, smart card microcontrollers, proactive command, offline terminals, protocol parameter selection, telemetry module, business card data, commit buffer, smart card system, smart card world, card operating systems, electronic purse systems, smart card applications, modern smart cards, manual authentication, smart card software, typical use cases, asymmetric cryptographic algorithms, card generation, background system, divider value, executable program code, unilateral authentication
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Secure Messaging, Open Platform, Application Toolkit, John Wiley, Command Response, High Card, Production Smart
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